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  4. How to implement reading serial data with ANSI color codes and printing out to textbox in color

How to implement reading serial data with ANSI color codes and printing out to textbox in color

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  • L lukutis222

    @Christian-Ehrlicher
    I cannot wrap my head around how does \r appear in the serial data then... The remote device that I am connected to only sends \n

    Christian EhrlicherC Online
    Christian EhrlicherC Online
    Christian Ehrlicher
    Lifetime Qt Champion
    wrote on last edited by Christian Ehrlicher
    #40

    @lukutis222 said in How to implement reading serial data with ANSI color codes and printing out to textbox in color:

    I cannot wrap my head around how does \r appear in the serial data then...

    Please output the QByteArray data, not the one converted to QString (for whatever reason binary data should be converted to a QString though).

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    L 1 Reply Last reply
    3
    • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

      @lukutis222 said in How to implement reading serial data with ANSI color codes and printing out to textbox in color:

      I cannot wrap my head around how does \r appear in the serial data then...

      Please output the QByteArray data, not the one converted to QString (for whatever reason binary data should be converted to a QString though).

      L Offline
      L Offline
      lukutis222
      wrote on last edited by lukutis222
      #41

      @Christian-Ehrlicher

      
          QByteArray data = serial_local->serial_connection.readAll(); //read all data
          QString DataAsString = QString(data); // covert  qbytearray to string
          uint16_t received_data_length = DataAsString.length();
      
          for(int i = 0; i <received_data_length;i++){
              qDebug("%u\n",DataAsString[i]);
          }
          qDebug("****RAW DATA***** \n");
          for(int i = 0; i <data.length();i++){
              qDebug("%u\n",data[i]);
          }
      

      Both identical.
      Does that mean that my remote device "secretly" slips in another \r without me even wanting ?

      Christian EhrlicherC 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • L lukutis222

        @Christian-Ehrlicher

        
            QByteArray data = serial_local->serial_connection.readAll(); //read all data
            QString DataAsString = QString(data); // covert  qbytearray to string
            uint16_t received_data_length = DataAsString.length();
        
            for(int i = 0; i <received_data_length;i++){
                qDebug("%u\n",DataAsString[i]);
            }
            qDebug("****RAW DATA***** \n");
            for(int i = 0; i <data.length();i++){
                qDebug("%u\n",data[i]);
            }
        

        Both identical.
        Does that mean that my remote device "secretly" slips in another \r without me even wanting ?

        Christian EhrlicherC Online
        Christian EhrlicherC Online
        Christian Ehrlicher
        Lifetime Qt Champion
        wrote on last edited by
        #42

        @lukutis222 said in How to implement reading serial data with ANSI color codes and printing out to textbox in color:

        Does that mean that my remote device "secretly" slips in another \r without me even wanting ?

        Yes

        Qt Online Installer direct download: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/online_installers/
        Visit the Qt Academy at https://academy.qt.io/catalog

        1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • L Offline
          L Offline
          lukutis222
          wrote on last edited by lukutis222
          #43

          I think I managed to achieve what I want (didint test 100% but I believe I am getting very close). I want to share the current logic, perhaps you can advise on how to improve it.

          void MainWindow::readData()
          {
              // save the scrollbar position
              QScrollBar *scrollbar = ui->Console_read_2->verticalScrollBar();
              bool scrollbarAtBottom  = (scrollbar->value() >= (scrollbar->maximum() - 4));
              int scrollbarPrevValue = scrollbar->value();
          
              // this moves the cursor to the bottom to avoid writing data in the middle of the console
              QTextCursor cursor = ui->Console_read_2->textCursor();
              cursor.clearSelection();
              cursor.movePosition(QTextCursor::End);
              ui->Console_read_2->setTextCursor(cursor);
          
              QByteArray data = serial_local->serial_connection.readAll(); //read all data
              QString DataAsString = QString(data); // covert  qbytearray to string
              static QString incomplete_line = nullptr; // hold information about the last incomplete line
              uint16_t beggining_pointer = 0; // save the beggining pointer
              
              DataAsString.replace("\r", "\n"); // replace all \r with \n
              DataAsString.replace("\n\n", "\n"); // this ensures that all double \n\n (if exist) will be replaces with just a single \n
          
              int index = DataAsString.indexOf('\n');
              
              while (index != -1) {
                  QString complete_line = DataAsString.mid(beggining_pointer, index-(beggining_pointer)); // index is where the \n was found in the string.
                  complete_line = incomplete_line+complete_line; // append beggining of incomplete line to complete line (initially incomplete line will be empty)
                  incomplete_line = nullptr; // reset the incomplete line after each append because its no longer relevant
                  Format_and_insert(complete_line); // insert data to console
                  beggining_pointer = index+1; // increment beggining pointer to the location where the previous \n was found because this will now be our beggining pointer
                  index = DataAsString.indexOf('\n', index+1);
          
              }
          
               incomplete_line = DataAsString.mid(beggining_pointer, DataAsString.length()); // after going through every line, take the last beggining pointer and read till the end of string.
          
              if (scrollbarAtBottom)
              {
                  ui->Console_read_2->ensureCursorVisible();
              }
              else
              {
                  ui->Console_read_2->verticalScrollBar()->setValue(scrollbarPrevValue);
              }
          
          
          }
          

          I am reading line by line and when I find an uncomplete line, I save it in the incomplete_line buffer and use it on the next iteration.

          1 Reply Last reply
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          • Christian EhrlicherC Online
            Christian EhrlicherC Online
            Christian Ehrlicher
            Lifetime Qt Champion
            wrote on last edited by
            #44

            And now you're again simulating readLine()/canReadLine()...

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            JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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            • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

              And now you're again simulating readLine()/canReadLine()...

              JonBJ Offline
              JonBJ Offline
              JonB
              wrote on last edited by JonB
              #45

              @Christian-Ehrlicher
              Which is what OP is wanting to do. His problem is that he wishes to treat \r, without requiring a following \n, as a line end. I have verified that Qt code for all of canReadLine/readLine/readLineData() have \n hard-coded in their logic. It is not possible to use these existing ones if you want to treat a bare \r as an acceptable line-ender. (In fact, he wishes to treat any/all of \n, \r or \r\n as line terminators, which complicates things.) While the proposed code above is "rough and ready", and has some flaws, and I personally was not prepared to write the full code of what he wants, if he is happy with this "approximation" it would seem that it would give him what he wants.

              Of course, if he did not insist on accepting \r as a line terminator it would be a whole lot simpler....

              Christian EhrlicherC 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • JonBJ JonB

                @Christian-Ehrlicher
                Which is what OP is wanting to do. His problem is that he wishes to treat \r, without requiring a following \n, as a line end. I have verified that Qt code for all of canReadLine/readLine/readLineData() have \n hard-coded in their logic. It is not possible to use these existing ones if you want to treat a bare \r as an acceptable line-ender. (In fact, he wishes to treat any/all of \n, \r or \r\n as line terminators, which complicates things.) While the proposed code above is "rough and ready", and has some flaws, and I personally was not prepared to write the full code of what he wants, if he is happy with this "approximation" it would seem that it would give him what he wants.

                Of course, if he did not insist on accepting \r as a line terminator it would be a whole lot simpler....

                Christian EhrlicherC Online
                Christian EhrlicherC Online
                Christian Ehrlicher
                Lifetime Qt Champion
                wrote on last edited by Christian Ehrlicher
                #46

                @JonB Overread this.

                Still the code looks ugly and over-complicated

                void parseBuffer()
                {
                  auto findNextSeparator = [](const QByteArray &ba, int startOfs) {
                    for (int i = startOfs; i < ba.size(); ++i) {
                      auto c = ba[i];
                      if (c == '\n' || c == '\r') {
                        return i;
                      }
                    }
                    return -1;
                  };
                  auto fromIdx = 0;
                  idx = findNextSeparator(m_buffer, fromIdx );
                  while (idx >= 0) {
                    auto line = m_buffer.mid(fromIdx , idx - fromIdx);
                    if (!line.isEmpty())
                      emit newLineReceived(line);
                    fromIdx = idx + 1;
                  }
                  m_buffer = m_buffer.mid(fromIdx);
                }
                

                Did not check if '\r' or '\n' is in the 'line' buffer - maybe this needs a +/-1 adjustment.

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                JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
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                • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

                  @JonB Overread this.

                  Still the code looks ugly and over-complicated

                  void parseBuffer()
                  {
                    auto findNextSeparator = [](const QByteArray &ba, int startOfs) {
                      for (int i = startOfs; i < ba.size(); ++i) {
                        auto c = ba[i];
                        if (c == '\n' || c == '\r') {
                          return i;
                        }
                      }
                      return -1;
                    };
                    auto fromIdx = 0;
                    idx = findNextSeparator(m_buffer, fromIdx );
                    while (idx >= 0) {
                      auto line = m_buffer.mid(fromIdx , idx - fromIdx);
                      if (!line.isEmpty())
                        emit newLineReceived(line);
                      fromIdx = idx + 1;
                    }
                    m_buffer = m_buffer.mid(fromIdx);
                  }
                  

                  Did not check if '\r' or '\n' is in the 'line' buffer - maybe this needs a +/-1 adjustment.

                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonBJ Offline
                  JonB
                  wrote on last edited by JonB
                  #47

                  @Christian-Ehrlicher
                  Please do not take this wrong, but your code is a touch simplistic. I don't blame you, as I was not prepared to write a comprehensive implementation!

                  Per the user's requirements, for example it fails to distinguish between incoming \r\n --- one line --- versus \n\n --- a line followed by a genuine blank line. It also does not deal with end-of-file at the end of a final line which has no \r or \n. It does not tell the OP when he needs to call readAll() to fetch more characters for the buffer, and address what to do if that returns eof. It does not deal well with the (unlikely but possible?) case where a readAll() returns a line ending in \r because that is all that has been received so far, when in fact the next character received in the future will be a \n after the \r. I am not saying his code deals with all of these cases either!

                  All of which is what I thought about when deciding whether I wished to offer the full, robust code, and decided not to... :)

                  Nonetheless, perhaps the OP will adapt your code to whatever situations he wants to cover.

                  1 Reply Last reply
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                  • Christian EhrlicherC Online
                    Christian EhrlicherC Online
                    Christian Ehrlicher
                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #48

                    I did not wrote the readAll() stuff because it does not belong to the parsing - it's a separate thing which does basically

                    onReadyRead()
                    {
                      m_buffer += m_socket->readAll();
                      parseBuffer();
                    }
                    

                    So the only thing left is the double empty line.

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                    JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                    1
                    • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

                      I did not wrote the readAll() stuff because it does not belong to the parsing - it's a separate thing which does basically

                      onReadyRead()
                      {
                        m_buffer += m_socket->readAll();
                        parseBuffer();
                      }
                      

                      So the only thing left is the double empty line.

                      JonBJ Offline
                      JonBJ Offline
                      JonB
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #49

                      @Christian-Ehrlicher
                      Point taken. I was looking at the existing implementation of (woboq) readLineData(), which does a mixture of actual read()s and "parsing" (looking for \n), and how that interacts with readLine() & canReadLine(), and got a bit caught up in that.

                      @lukutis222
                      If it's all a bit complex probably best ignore my discussion with @Christian-Ehrlicher and think about whether you want to change your code over to his suggested approach.

                      Christian EhrlicherC 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • JonBJ JonB

                        @Christian-Ehrlicher
                        Point taken. I was looking at the existing implementation of (woboq) readLineData(), which does a mixture of actual read()s and "parsing" (looking for \n), and how that interacts with readLine() & canReadLine(), and got a bit caught up in that.

                        @lukutis222
                        If it's all a bit complex probably best ignore my discussion with @Christian-Ehrlicher and think about whether you want to change your code over to his suggested approach.

                        Christian EhrlicherC Online
                        Christian EhrlicherC Online
                        Christian Ehrlicher
                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #50

                        @JonB said in How to implement reading serial data with ANSI color codes and printing out to textbox in color:

                        I was looking at the existing implementation of (woboq) readLineData(), which does a mixture of actual read()s and "parsing" (looking for \n), and how that interacts with readLine() & canReadLine(), and got a bit caught up in that.

                        My approach needs some miore CPU time but is easier to understand :)

                        Qt Online Installer direct download: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/online_installers/
                        Visit the Qt Academy at https://academy.qt.io/catalog

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        1
                        • L Offline
                          L Offline
                          lukutis222
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #51

                          @JonB @Christian-Ehrlicher
                          Your discussion is very helpful :) Thank you very much

                          1 Reply Last reply
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