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Setting fixed values for height and width of array of widgets

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  • JonBJ JonB

    @Swati777999 said in Setting fixed values for height and width of array of widgets:

    tableLayout->addWidget(myTables[ii],0,ii);
    My program crashes at n>=2.

    So clearly, when you access myTables[2] that must be out-of-range --- I would guess your myTables only has 2 elements?

    jsulmJ Offline
    jsulmJ Offline
    jsulm
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on last edited by
    #7

    @JonB said in Setting fixed values for height and width of array of widgets:

    I would guess your myTables only has 2 elements?

    I asked that two times already, then @Christian-Ehrlicher asked same question, now you - let's see how long it takes to get this basic information :-)
    It is really hard to help people who do not read answers properly and do not answer questions...

    https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

    JonBJ Swati777999S 2 Replies Last reply
    2
    • jsulmJ jsulm

      @JonB said in Setting fixed values for height and width of array of widgets:

      I would guess your myTables only has 2 elements?

      I asked that two times already, then @Christian-Ehrlicher asked same question, now you - let's see how long it takes to get this basic information :-)
      It is really hard to help people who do not read answers properly and do not answer questions...

      JonBJ Offline
      JonBJ Offline
      JonB
      wrote on last edited by JonB
      #8

      @jsulm
      I wrote similar to same OP in https://forum.qt.io/topic/132497/how-to-get-the-dimensions-of-the-widgets/5. I hope that user will take time to read and act on people's questions/answers/suggestions.

      @Swati777999 wrote:

      I checked it in the debugger and found out the faulty point ,i.e n=2.

      It is good that you are using the debugger. When you were there did you look at the size/dimension/number of elements in myTables? There are windows in the debugger which display information like how many elements there are in a list/array. By the way, what type is your myTables (show its declaration)?

      Swati777999S 1 Reply Last reply
      2
      • jsulmJ jsulm

        @JonB said in Setting fixed values for height and width of array of widgets:

        I would guess your myTables only has 2 elements?

        I asked that two times already, then @Christian-Ehrlicher asked same question, now you - let's see how long it takes to get this basic information :-)
        It is really hard to help people who do not read answers properly and do not answer questions...

        Swati777999S Offline
        Swati777999S Offline
        Swati777999
        wrote on last edited by
        #9

        @jsulm

        but why would it have 2 entries? I've already used for-loop for adding entries to the widget.

        “ In order to be irreplaceable, one must always be different” – Coco Chanel

        jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • JonBJ JonB

          @jsulm
          I wrote similar to same OP in https://forum.qt.io/topic/132497/how-to-get-the-dimensions-of-the-widgets/5. I hope that user will take time to read and act on people's questions/answers/suggestions.

          @Swati777999 wrote:

          I checked it in the debugger and found out the faulty point ,i.e n=2.

          It is good that you are using the debugger. When you were there did you look at the size/dimension/number of elements in myTables? There are windows in the debugger which display information like how many elements there are in a list/array. By the way, what type is your myTables (show its declaration)?

          Swati777999S Offline
          Swati777999S Offline
          Swati777999
          wrote on last edited by
          #10

          @JonB

          Declaration of myTables

           QMap<int, QTableWidget *>myTables;
          

          Actually, I want to create tables with 7 rows and 2 columns inside a QGridLayout tableLayout . I have performed
          inside a loop ,
          tableLayout->addwidgets(myTables[ii],0,ii)

           QWidget *myWidget = new QWidget();
           QGridLayout *tableLayout = new QGridLayout();
          

          In the debugger, for the value of myTable it says <not accessible >
          I hope that I made my point more clear.

          Let me write the code again:
          This code is working absolutely fine but

          for (int ii=0;ii<n;ii++)
           {
              tableLayout->addWidget(myTables[ii],0,ii);
           }
          

          when I add the following, it makes myTable[ii] in accessible, don't know why.

          for (int ii=0;ii<n;ii++)
          {
             tableLayout->addWidget(myTables[ii],0,ii);
                          //for adding table..............
             myTables[ii]->setRowCount(6);
             myTables[ii]->setColumnCount(2)
           }
          
          

          “ In order to be irreplaceable, one must always be different” – Coco Chanel

          1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • Swati777999S Swati777999

            @jsulm

            but why would it have 2 entries? I've already used for-loop for adding entries to the widget.

            jsulmJ Offline
            jsulmJ Offline
            jsulm
            Lifetime Qt Champion
            wrote on last edited by
            #11

            @Swati777999 said in Setting fixed values for height and width of array of widgets:

            but why would it have 2 entries?

            Why are you asking me?! I did not write your code.
            Why don't you simply check how many entries you have there?!
            If you can't see it in debugger you can simply add a debug output:

            qDebug() << myTable.size();
            for (int ii=0;ii<n;ii++)
            ...
            

            https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

            Swati777999S 1 Reply Last reply
            2
            • jsulmJ jsulm

              @Swati777999 said in Setting fixed values for height and width of array of widgets:

              but why would it have 2 entries?

              Why are you asking me?! I did not write your code.
              Why don't you simply check how many entries you have there?!
              If you can't see it in debugger you can simply add a debug output:

              qDebug() << myTable.size();
              for (int ii=0;ii<n;ii++)
              ...
              
              Swati777999S Offline
              Swati777999S Offline
              Swati777999
              wrote on last edited by
              #12

              @jsulm

              Yes, I checked the size of table with qDebug() << myTable.size() which came out to be 1.

              Actually the fact is that

              QWidget *myWidget = new QWidget();
              QGridLayout *tableLayout = new QGridLayout();
              tableLayout->setMargin(10);
              myWidget->setLayout(tableLayout);
              QMainWindow::setCentralWidget(myWidget);
              
              int n=5;
              QMap<int, QTableWidget *>myTables;
              for (int ii=0;ii<n;ii++)
              { myTables[ii]=new QTableWidget();
              tableLayout->addWidget(myTables[ii],0,ii);
              }
              qDebug()<<"Size of the table is="<<myTables.size();
              

              The above code works fine with the size of myTable as 5, but
              whenever I want to do some operations on the elements of myTable [ii] , it crashes from there.
              What could be the reason of it?

              “ In order to be irreplaceable, one must always be different” – Coco Chanel

              jsulmJ JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
              0
              • Swati777999S Swati777999

                @jsulm

                Yes, I checked the size of table with qDebug() << myTable.size() which came out to be 1.

                Actually the fact is that

                QWidget *myWidget = new QWidget();
                QGridLayout *tableLayout = new QGridLayout();
                tableLayout->setMargin(10);
                myWidget->setLayout(tableLayout);
                QMainWindow::setCentralWidget(myWidget);
                
                int n=5;
                QMap<int, QTableWidget *>myTables;
                for (int ii=0;ii<n;ii++)
                { myTables[ii]=new QTableWidget();
                tableLayout->addWidget(myTables[ii],0,ii);
                }
                qDebug()<<"Size of the table is="<<myTables.size();
                

                The above code works fine with the size of myTable as 5, but
                whenever I want to do some operations on the elements of myTable [ii] , it crashes from there.
                What could be the reason of it?

                jsulmJ Offline
                jsulmJ Offline
                jsulm
                Lifetime Qt Champion
                wrote on last edited by
                #13

                @Swati777999 said in Setting fixed values for height and width of array of widgets:

                What could be the reason of it?

                Use debugger to find the reason.
                It will tell you in which line it crashes and you will have the stack trace which you can post here so others can see what is happening instead of guessing.

                https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                1 Reply Last reply
                2
                • Swati777999S Swati777999

                  @jsulm

                  Yes, I checked the size of table with qDebug() << myTable.size() which came out to be 1.

                  Actually the fact is that

                  QWidget *myWidget = new QWidget();
                  QGridLayout *tableLayout = new QGridLayout();
                  tableLayout->setMargin(10);
                  myWidget->setLayout(tableLayout);
                  QMainWindow::setCentralWidget(myWidget);
                  
                  int n=5;
                  QMap<int, QTableWidget *>myTables;
                  for (int ii=0;ii<n;ii++)
                  { myTables[ii]=new QTableWidget();
                  tableLayout->addWidget(myTables[ii],0,ii);
                  }
                  qDebug()<<"Size of the table is="<<myTables.size();
                  

                  The above code works fine with the size of myTable as 5, but
                  whenever I want to do some operations on the elements of myTable [ii] , it crashes from there.
                  What could be the reason of it?

                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonB
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #14

                  @Swati777999
                  After you have done as @jsulm suggests and tracked down and solved the reason for your crash here.

                  Unless you have some reason in code we have not seen, I doubt you want the QMap<int, QTableWidget *>myTables you have chosen. It will just lead to complications. For an array why don't you declare it as QVector<QTableWidget *>myTables instead?

                  Swati777999S 1 Reply Last reply
                  1
                  • JonBJ JonB

                    @Swati777999
                    After you have done as @jsulm suggests and tracked down and solved the reason for your crash here.

                    Unless you have some reason in code we have not seen, I doubt you want the QMap<int, QTableWidget *>myTables you have chosen. It will just lead to complications. For an array why don't you declare it as QVector<QTableWidget *>myTables instead?

                    Swati777999S Offline
                    Swati777999S Offline
                    Swati777999
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #15

                    @JonB
                    Thanks for the suggestion. Let me use QVector and check its impact on the code.

                    Edit: QMap works fine whereas QVector behaves in a weird way. At least, I am able to add myTable[ii] elements to the layout with the help of QMap container.

                    “ In order to be irreplaceable, one must always be different” – Coco Chanel

                    jsulmJ JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • Swati777999S Swati777999

                      @JonB
                      Thanks for the suggestion. Let me use QVector and check its impact on the code.

                      Edit: QMap works fine whereas QVector behaves in a weird way. At least, I am able to add myTable[ii] elements to the layout with the help of QMap container.

                      jsulmJ Offline
                      jsulmJ Offline
                      jsulm
                      Lifetime Qt Champion
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #16

                      @Swati777999 said in Setting fixed values for height and width of array of widgets:

                      whereas QVector behaves in a weird way

                      Then it is your code.
                      Without code and more information not possible to say more than that.

                      https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • Swati777999S Swati777999

                        @JonB
                        Thanks for the suggestion. Let me use QVector and check its impact on the code.

                        Edit: QMap works fine whereas QVector behaves in a weird way. At least, I am able to add myTable[ii] elements to the layout with the help of QMap container.

                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                        #17

                        @Swati777999 said in Setting fixed values for height and width of array of widgets:

                        Edit: QMap works fine whereas QVector behaves in a weird way. At least, I am able to add myTable[ii] elements to the layout with the help of QMap container.

                        For an array/QVector you must actively create enough room in the array to accommodate elements, through one of:

                        myTables.resize(5);  // allocates room for 5 elements in the vector, numbered 0..4
                        // or
                        myTables.append(new QTableWidget());  // appends one element to the vector
                        

                        I did say to deal with why your code with QMap does not work in the first place before worrying about this....

                        1 Reply Last reply
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