[SOLVED] Suggest a faster way for replacing custom parameters in a string
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I have a class that should print a message with a certain string formatting. I'm using custom parameters defined with %$ where $ is any aA-zZ character. So a formatted string should look like "the sum of %a and %b is %c".
My way of implementing the parameter replacing is simply to use QString::replace("%$", 5) for each parameter. However, I need to add some extra html formatting tags ( <b>, <i>, ect...) for each tag, and that makes it a way heavier task.Do you know a faster way of replacing those parameters and adding those tags for each? Maybe, did I miss any QString method that could do all the replacements at once, faster ?
p.s. I know about QString().arg(), but that requires me to know in advance the number of parameters a formatted string would have, which in this application is not the case. Also, unspecified arguments that are not replaced (say I only use 5 arguments of 10 available) will remain as %6, %7 and so on, which is definitely an unwanted behavior.
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Hi,
Can you show an example of string that your are building ?
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The string could be anything, really. It could include any number of parameters and other text. This is one:
"[%HH:%mm:%s.%zzz] operation completed (%EE) %M"
And that's the code I'm using at the moment:
void consoleWidget::print(QVariant message, errorLevel EL){ // using a QVariant to allow printing both strings and numeric data types // get current local time QTime curTime(QTime::currentTime()); // error level messages; el_msg[0] must not be empty (using a space) to prevent QString::at() crashing the application -> const QString el_msg[4] = {" ", "info", "warning", "error"}; // replace parameters with data with the format specified in _format // _format is a private (pointer to) QString storing the message format to print, such as: // "[%HH:%mm:%s.%zzz] operation completed (%EE) %M" QString tmpMsg(*_format); // hour, leading zero, 00-23 or 01-12AM/PM tmpMsg.replace("%hh", curTime.toString("hh")); // hour, 0-23 or 1-12AM/PM tmpMsg.replace("%h", curTime.toString("h") ); // hour, 0-23 tmpMsg.replace("%HH", curTime.toString("HH")); // minutes, 0-59 tmpMsg.replace("%H", curTime.toString("H") ); // minutes, leading 0, 00-59 tmpMsg.replace("%mm", curTime.toString("mm")); // hour, leading 0, 00-23 tmpMsg.replace("%m", curTime.toString("m") ); // seconds, leading 0, 00-59 tmpMsg.replace("%ss", curTime.toString("ss")); // seconds, 0-59 tmpMsg.replace("%s", curTime.toString("s") ); // milliseconds, leading 0, 000-999 tmpMsg.replace("%zzz",curTime.toString("zzz")); // milliseconds, 0-999 tmpMsg.replace("%z", curTime.toString("z") ); // am/pm (lowercase) tmpMsg.replace("%a", curTime.toString("a") ); // AM/PM (UPPERCASE) tmpMsg.replace("%A", curTime.toString("A") ); // timezone tmpMsg.replace("%t", curTime.toString("t") ); // error level, lowercase, extended: error, warning, info, (empty) tmpMsg.replace("%ee", el_msg[EL]); // error level, lowercase, abbreviated: e, w, i, (empty) tmpMsg.replace("%e" , el_msg[EL].at(0)); // error level, UPPERCASE, extended: ERROR, WARNING, INFO, (empty) tmpMsg.replace("%EE", el_msg[EL].toUpper()); // error level, UPPERCASE, abbreviated: E, W, I, (empty) tmpMsg.replace("%E" , el_msg[EL].at(0).toUpper()); // replace user message parameter with data // Most QVariant stored types can be converted to QString, it's safe not to check for conversion availability tmpMsg.replace("%M", message.toString()); // will be replaced with appendHtml() this->appendPlainText(tmpMsg); }
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@T3STY said:
"[%HH:%mm:%s.%zzz] operation completed (%EE) %M"
If that is a typically length of your source string then something like
tmpMsg.replace("%a", " <b>" + curTime.toString("a") + "</b>");
Should be fast enough ?
Or Am I completely misunderstanding the question ? -
That is what I was thinking to use. However, I was asking if there was anything that would replace all the parameters at once.
Replacing strings so many times with QString::replace() causes a lot of memory reallocation in order to expand the string size to fit requirements, which also causes more CPU usage. While increasing the string size to twice every allocation is fast enough, doing so 3 or 4 times for 30 strings causes a huge performance loss.
So, if there was any way to tell QString::replace() (or some other method) about more things to replace at once I think it would definitely be faster and cheaper for the memory.BTW, The format string could be made of even 20 parameters with extra (non parametric) words. Consider:
"h: %h | hh: %hh | H: %h | HH: %HH | m: %m | mm: %mm | s: %s | ss: %ss | z: %z | zzz: %zzz | a: %a | A: %A | | t: %t | e: %e | E: %E | ee: %ee | EE: %EE | | %M"
which includes only part of the parameters I want to implement. Also %M is a user message that could be even hundred of characters long. There is no typical string length that I could consider to reserve memory in advance.
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I'd say sum up the total length of the parameters and call reserve on the string before doing the replacements.
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That's a good idea! Thanks :)
But it will still not solve the number replacements I should make... I have to think about some other strategy... -
I can't provide any idea or solution, but maybe i can give you a hint - something i would try: Check out the source-code of the QString class and see what ::args(...) does. Maybe you can use Qt's code and implement the functionality to have different kinds of parameter-types(%s, %EE, ...).
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Unfortunately, modifying Qt's source is not a viable option because of the license I'm using (LGPL). But I think I found some strategy to maintain some const-ness in the initial string length. I am using pre-formatted strings with "<FONT class="something">%1</FONT>" html tags, so most formatting is done with CSS ( QPlainTextEdit::document::setDefaultStyleSheet() ). This will reduce the number of reallocations (before replacement) to 1 (the %1 argument) with QString::arg(), and then I replace all data in the final string. I'm also thinking about other possible tricks like asking the time to QTime::getCurrentTime() with a separate string, so I would only replace time once instead of for each parameter.
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But it will still not solve the number replacements I should make
You'll need to convert the numbers to strings anyway, so you can do that first and get the length of these strings.
The problem here is that numeric conversions in Qt like Qstring::number return a new string (thus allocate memory).
You could allocate a handful of QStrings once, reserve some space in them and then use QTextStream to make the conversions "in place". -
@Chris-Kawa The number to string conversion is done via QVariant::toString() anyway, so that is not a problem. And reserving space is not necessary anymore if I use the tricks above :)
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@T3STY said:
Unfortunately, modifying Qt's source is not a viable option because of the license I'm using (LGPL).
No need to modify Qt's source. Just check what Qt does in such a case and develop your own algorithm/method.
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What about just doing a good old
QString message = "{" QTime::currentTime().toString() + el_msg[] etc.
?
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@SGaist that would make it hard to follow a pre-format string. Yes, it would be faster and, to some extent, easier. But definitely not the solution in my case.
Anyway, eventually I went for the HTML pre-formatted strings method that I wrote about in an earlier post. It's the easier and faster solution for me and seems to have the lightest impact on performance of all methods I have tried.
Thank you all for help :)
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If you want to be sure about the performance: QBENCHMARK ;)
Happy coding !