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QML and JSON

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  • F Offline
    F Offline
    fcrochik
    wrote on last edited by
    #14

    [quote author="luizpaulo" date="1291470389"]Hey a good Qt/C++ JSON parser is avaliable with a LGPL licence: http://qjson.sourceforge.net/
    Might be what you need.[/quote]

    I saw it when I was working on a simple json parser but decided against it. Depending on the task you can get the same result w/o any additional dependencies - just using the script module.

    Certified Specialist & Qt Ambassador <a href="http://www.crochik.com">Maemo, Meego, Symbian, Playbook, RaspberryPi, Desktop... Qt everywhere!</a>

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    • D Offline
      D Offline
      dridk
      wrote on last edited by
      #15

      Hello here is my point of view! I tested everything! XMLModel, javascript XML parser, C++ side parser etc...

      Do Not use C++ Json parser : Because exchange data between c++ and QML is slow

      Make a Javascript parser ! It's more easy with eval ! Here is an example :

      Json data
      @
      {"index":["all"],"flux":{"all":[{"data":{"title":"boris","icon":"icon.png"}]}}
      @

      QML side : main.qml
      @
      import QtQuick 1.0
      import "parser.js" as JS

      Item {
      id:root
      width: 360
      height: 640

      Component.onCompleted: JS.load()
      
      
      ListModel {  id:listModel }
      
      ListView {
          id:view
          anchors.fill:parent
          model : listModel
          delegate: Rectangle {
               width:parent.width
               height:80
               Text {
               anchors.center:parent
               text: title
               }
             
          }
      }
      

      }
      @

      javascript side : parser.js

      @
      function load() {

      listModel.clear();
      var xhr = new XMLHttpRequest();
      

      xhr.open("GET","http://data.json",true);
      xhr.onreadystatechange = function()
      {
      if ( xhr.readyState == xhr.DONE)
      {
      if ( xhr.status == 200)
      {
      var jsonObject = eval('(' + xhr.responseText + ')');
      loaded(jsonObject)
      }
      }
      }
      xhr.send();
      }

      function loaded(jsonObject)
      {
      for ( var index in jsonObject.flux.all )
      {
      listModel.append({
      "title" : jsonObject.flux.all[index].data["title"],
      "icon" : jsonObject.flux.all[index].data["icon"]});
      }

      // get directly the json object. Should work but not tested
      //listModel.append({jsonObject.flux.all});

      }
      @

      Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution

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      • F Offline
        F Offline
        fcrochik
        wrote on last edited by
        #16

        It is a little surprising to me that you found that exchanging data between C++ and QML to be slow.

        I can imagine that maybe the C++ xml parser you tried is slow but I can't imagine creating the model in c++ can be any slower than creating it using Javascript.

        Another scenario I can imagine it would slow things is if you are adding elements to a model that is already in use.

        I am just curious of the why...

        Certified Specialist & Qt Ambassador <a href="http://www.crochik.com">Maemo, Meego, Symbian, Playbook, RaspberryPi, Desktop... Qt everywhere!</a>

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        • D Offline
          D Offline
          dridk
          wrote on last edited by
          #17

          That what I m thinking before! But a a guy said me that, and I trust him ... He said me C++ parsing is faster, but exchanging between binary and script is slower.

          So, no matter, the javascript method is a little bit more easy than creating a c++ model ! :)

          Nothing in Biology Makes Sense Except in the Light of Evolution

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          • R Offline
            R Offline
            remy_david
            wrote on last edited by
            #18

            I am also not so happy with the performances of my C++ model but I can't precisely say what's slowing down.

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            • AlicemirrorA Offline
              AlicemirrorA Offline
              Alicemirror
              wrote on last edited by
              #19

              Hi to all,

              I see that the interest in json parsing is always present. I tried to manage qjson but it seems too complex for what can be done and I have developed a method that I am experiencing very efficient and reliable. It concerns of a C++ class and a very short function in js to be used by QML. If someone is interested I can explain it in details in a wiki page. For now the method is integrated in a project but it will be one of the new features of Qt-Complex 2.0 that I am preparing.

              Take a look to http://projects.developer.nokia.com/pricemyhouse.

              Enrico Miglino (aka Alicemirror)
              Balearic Dynamics
              Islas Baleares, Ibiza (Spain)
              www.balearicdynamics.com

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              • P Offline
                P Offline
                peppelorum
                wrote on last edited by
                #20

                Please don't use eval when parsing json-data, you are actually running the code, so if something nasty is in the reply you get, well...

                I've made a small library that plays nice with QML, for making the whole ajax-thingie a bit easier, you can check it out at https://github.com/peppelorum/ajaxmee

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                • C Offline
                  C Offline
                  Chuck Gao
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #21

                  I think the simplest way to parse and turn json data to C++ model is using QScriptEngine. Please see:
                  @
                  QScriptValue json = m_scriptEngine->evaluate("JSON.parse").call(QScriptValue(), QScriptValueList() << jsonString);
                  QVariantList xxxList = json.toVariant().toList();
                  or
                  QVariantMap xxxMap = json.toVariant().toMap();
                  .....
                  Then, do parse
                  .....
                  @

                  And, in the code, m_scriptEngine is your QScriptEngine, and jsonString is your json data

                  Chuck

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                  • F Offline
                    F Offline
                    fcrochik
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #22

                    QML "includes" a JSON parser. You can just use, without having to include anything:

                    @var obj = JSON.parse( myJSONString );@

                    "See json.org for more details":http://www.json.org/js.html

                    Of course eval can do the trick as well but it is risky and the JSON parser maybe optimized.

                    Certified Specialist & Qt Ambassador <a href="http://www.crochik.com">Maemo, Meego, Symbian, Playbook, RaspberryPi, Desktop... Qt everywhere!</a>

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                    • K Offline
                      K Offline
                      kromain
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #23

                      For anybody still interested, I've just published a JSONListModel component that works just like XMLListModel, but for JSON data instead. It's all pure QML/Javascript, and it even supports queries via JSONPath (XPath for JSON).

                      You can read more about it there: "Devnet article":http://qt-project.org/wiki/JSONListModel

                      Romain Pokrzywka
                      KDAB - http://www.kdab.com

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