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QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?

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  • JonBJ JonB

    @devhobby

    My Table View now is all red without changing anything!

    Have you understood you now need to look up the cell coordinates (item) in the vector of changed cells, as per:

    @SGaist said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

    One way could be to keep a vector of edited cells that you update when setData is called with the EditRole and that you will use when data is called for the BackgroundRole and you return the colour you want.

    devhobbyD Offline
    devhobbyD Offline
    devhobby
    wrote on last edited by
    #53

    @JonB @SGaist said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

    @devhobby

    My Table View now is all red without changing anything!

    Have you understood you now need to look up the cell coordinates (item) in the vector of changed cells, as per:

    @SGaist said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

    One way could be to keep a vector of edited cells that you update when setData is called with the EditRole and that you will use when data is called for the BackgroundRole and you return the colour you want.

    I did it.

    But now all the text is gone!

    0_1518131506845_a38413b2-1d30-4f3d-95d3-629b057ec602-image.png

    The color is applied to the modified cells.

    But there's no text! Even if I don't edit any cell, the text is gone!

    JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
    0
    • devhobbyD devhobby

      @JonB @SGaist said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

      @devhobby

      My Table View now is all red without changing anything!

      Have you understood you now need to look up the cell coordinates (item) in the vector of changed cells, as per:

      @SGaist said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

      One way could be to keep a vector of edited cells that you update when setData is called with the EditRole and that you will use when data is called for the BackgroundRole and you return the colour you want.

      I did it.

      But now all the text is gone!

      0_1518131506845_a38413b2-1d30-4f3d-95d3-629b057ec602-image.png

      The color is applied to the modified cells.

      But there's no text! Even if I don't edit any cell, the text is gone!

      JonBJ Offline
      JonBJ Offline
      JonB
      wrote on last edited by
      #54

      @devhobby
      What? You want text as well as color? ;-)

      I think you'll need to show us your data() function now?

      devhobbyD 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • JonBJ JonB

        @devhobby
        What? You want text as well as color? ;-)

        I think you'll need to show us your data() function now?

        devhobbyD Offline
        devhobbyD Offline
        devhobby
        wrote on last edited by devhobby
        #55

        @JonB said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

        @devhobby
        What? You want text as well as color? ;-)

        I think you'll need to show us your data() function now?

        Oh God, don't tell me it's another pain in the neck!

        QVariant MyModel::data(const QModelIndex& item, int role) const
        {
            if(role == Qt::BackgroundRole)
            {
                if(MainWindow::cellsEdited.contains(item))
                    return QColor(66, 197, 244, 150);
            }
        
            return QVariant();
        }
        

        Yes... I want the background color to stay behind the text, of course...

        JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • devhobbyD devhobby

          @JonB said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

          @devhobby
          What? You want text as well as color? ;-)

          I think you'll need to show us your data() function now?

          Oh God, don't tell me it's another pain in the neck!

          QVariant MyModel::data(const QModelIndex& item, int role) const
          {
              if(role == Qt::BackgroundRole)
              {
                  if(MainWindow::cellsEdited.contains(item))
                      return QColor(66, 197, 244, 150);
              }
          
              return QVariant();
          }
          

          Yes... I want the background color to stay behind the text, of course...

          JonBJ Offline
          JonBJ Offline
          JonB
          wrote on last edited by JonB
          #56

          @devhobby
          You're supposed to be only handling Qt::BackgroundRole special case. The rest of the time presumably you want to return the inherited class's implementation of data(). So: instead of your return QVariant(); catch-all, you want whatever it is (remember I'm not C++) for return base::data(item, role);.

          The idea is: your overload is not called only for the color (which is when role == Qt::BackgroundRole), it's called loads of other times for quite different information (including the text) with other values of role. You were returning an empty QVariant for any other "property" of the cell, including its text! That's how it works.

          BTW, if it's any consolation, I'm as new to this as you are. So I didn't know it worked this way till earlier too.

          devhobbyD 1 Reply Last reply
          2
          • JonBJ JonB

            @devhobby
            You're supposed to be only handling Qt::BackgroundRole special case. The rest of the time presumably you want to return the inherited class's implementation of data(). So: instead of your return QVariant(); catch-all, you want whatever it is (remember I'm not C++) for return base::data(item, role);.

            The idea is: your overload is not called only for the color (which is when role == Qt::BackgroundRole), it's called loads of other times for quite different information (including the text) with other values of role. You were returning an empty QVariant for any other "property" of the cell, including its text! That's how it works.

            BTW, if it's any consolation, I'm as new to this as you are. So I didn't know it worked this way till earlier too.

            devhobbyD Offline
            devhobbyD Offline
            devhobby
            wrote on last edited by devhobby
            #57

            @JonB said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

            @devhobby
            You're supposed to be only handling Qt::BackgroundRole special case. The rest of the time presumably you want to return the inherited class's implementation of data(). So: instead of your return QVariant(); catch-all, you want whatever it is (remember I'm not C++) for return base::data(item, role);.
            The idea is: your overload is not called only for the color (which is when role == Qt::BackgroundRole), it's called loads of other times for quite different information (including the text) with other values of role. You were returning an empty QVariant for any other "property" of the cell, including its text! That's how it works.
            BTW, if it's any consolation, I'm as new to this as you are. So I didn't know it worked this way till earlier too.

            Oh ok thanks, it worked!

            Do you know, by chance, in which order are setData() and data() called? When is data() specifically called? When a dataChanged signal is emitted?

            JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
            0
            • devhobbyD devhobby

              @JonB said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

              @devhobby
              You're supposed to be only handling Qt::BackgroundRole special case. The rest of the time presumably you want to return the inherited class's implementation of data(). So: instead of your return QVariant(); catch-all, you want whatever it is (remember I'm not C++) for return base::data(item, role);.
              The idea is: your overload is not called only for the color (which is when role == Qt::BackgroundRole), it's called loads of other times for quite different information (including the text) with other values of role. You were returning an empty QVariant for any other "property" of the cell, including its text! That's how it works.
              BTW, if it's any consolation, I'm as new to this as you are. So I didn't know it worked this way till earlier too.

              Oh ok thanks, it worked!

              Do you know, by chance, in which order are setData() and data() called? When is data() specifically called? When a dataChanged signal is emitted?

              JonBJ Offline
              JonBJ Offline
              JonB
              wrote on last edited by JonB
              #58

              @devhobby
              Well, I presume:

              • setData() is called whenever the data is changed/set
              • dataChanged signal should be emitted by setData() whenever new data is different from current data
              • data() is called many times, with whatever role aspect is wanted, not only by your code but also by Qt code whenever it wants a piece of information

              http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qt.html#ItemDataRole-enum:

              enum Qt::ItemDataRole

              Each item in the model has a set of data elements associated with it, each with its own role. The roles are used by the view to indicate to the model which type of data it needs. Custom models should return data in these types.

              devhobbyD 1 Reply Last reply
              1
              • JonBJ JonB

                @devhobby
                Well, I presume:

                • setData() is called whenever the data is changed/set
                • dataChanged signal should be emitted by setData() whenever new data is different from current data
                • data() is called many times, with whatever role aspect is wanted, not only by your code but also by Qt code whenever it wants a piece of information

                http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qt.html#ItemDataRole-enum:

                enum Qt::ItemDataRole

                Each item in the model has a set of data elements associated with it, each with its own role. The roles are used by the view to indicate to the model which type of data it needs. Custom models should return data in these types.

                devhobbyD Offline
                devhobbyD Offline
                devhobby
                wrote on last edited by
                #59

                @JonB said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

                @devhobby
                Well, I presume:

                • setData() is called whenever the data is changed/set
                • dataChanged signal should be emitted by setData() whenever new data is different from current data
                • data() is called many times, with whatever role aspect is wanted, not only by your code but also by Qt code whenever it wants a piece of information

                http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qt.html#ItemDataRole-enum:

                enum Qt::ItemDataRole

                Each item in the model has a set of data elements associated with it, each with its own role. The roles are used by the view to indicate to the model which type of data it needs. Custom models should return data in these types.

                What I have noticed:

                1. Double-Click signal on the Table View calls slot function onTableChanged()
                2. onTableChanged() calls data() when it has finished
                  <>
                3. Flags are checked
                4. setData() is called if flag is editable
                5. Signal dataChanged is emitted by setData()

                Where's the problem?

                Say I want to allow modification of some cells (name, surname...) and forbid modification of others (primary key, foreign key...)

                I have a vector of immutable columns (0, 3, 5...)

                I have to check if the column being edited belongs to the vector of immutable columns... TWICE!

                One inside the flag() function and one inside onTableChanged()

                • Doing the check in flags() keeps me from modifying the content of the cell (hence, disabling the double-click)
                • Doing the check in onTableChanged() keeps the cells from being added to the vector of cells that need to be coloured by data()

                Both checks are identical, but serve for 2 different purposes: one for disabling the double-click, the other for disabling the coloration.

                All of these events are not sequential. I put a symbol <> in the list above to evidence two apparently unrelated events.

                If these events had been sequential, I would've written only ONE check at the beginning of the event.

                So, the question is: should I keep the situation this way (2 checks)?

                JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • SGaistS Offline
                  SGaistS Offline
                  SGaist
                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #60

                  If you overwrote the flags method correctly, you shouldn't be able to edit the corresponding cell so you shouldn't have to make several checks.

                  Interested in AI ? www.idiap.ch
                  Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                  devhobbyD 1 Reply Last reply
                  1
                  • devhobbyD devhobby

                    @VRonin said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

                    See https://forum.qt.io/topic/85973/how-to-simply-change-the-background-colour-of-a-cell-inside-a-tableview

                    Thanks but before doing that, I was wondering if there's a way to change the content of the cell by directly typing into it.

                    I just want to change the data of the cell and, once changed, color that cell in a different color to alert the user of the change of that particular item/cell.

                    Seems a lot of hard-coding work... maybe I should find another convenient way... but for now let's see what comes out

                    VRoninV Offline
                    VRoninV Offline
                    VRonin
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #61

                    @devhobby said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

                    @VRonin said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

                    See https://forum.qt.io/topic/85973/how-to-simply-change-the-background-colour-of-a-cell-inside-a-tableview

                    Thanks but before doing that

                    This discussion went on way too long because you didn't bother looking at that link.

                    The solution is already presented there. Basically you need a proxy between the QSqlQueryModel and the view that can handle data changes. That link presents you with an example implementation. You can then use the dataChanged signal of the proxy to detect things you probably want to send to db

                    P.S.
                    Be careful that proxy considers Qt::EditRole as separate from Qt::DisplayRole

                    "La mort n'est rien, mais vivre vaincu et sans gloire, c'est mourir tous les jours"
                    ~Napoleon Bonaparte

                    On a crusade to banish setIndexWidget() from the holy land of Qt

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • devhobbyD devhobby

                      @JonB said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

                      @devhobby
                      Well, I presume:

                      • setData() is called whenever the data is changed/set
                      • dataChanged signal should be emitted by setData() whenever new data is different from current data
                      • data() is called many times, with whatever role aspect is wanted, not only by your code but also by Qt code whenever it wants a piece of information

                      http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qt.html#ItemDataRole-enum:

                      enum Qt::ItemDataRole

                      Each item in the model has a set of data elements associated with it, each with its own role. The roles are used by the view to indicate to the model which type of data it needs. Custom models should return data in these types.

                      What I have noticed:

                      1. Double-Click signal on the Table View calls slot function onTableChanged()
                      2. onTableChanged() calls data() when it has finished
                        <>
                      3. Flags are checked
                      4. setData() is called if flag is editable
                      5. Signal dataChanged is emitted by setData()

                      Where's the problem?

                      Say I want to allow modification of some cells (name, surname...) and forbid modification of others (primary key, foreign key...)

                      I have a vector of immutable columns (0, 3, 5...)

                      I have to check if the column being edited belongs to the vector of immutable columns... TWICE!

                      One inside the flag() function and one inside onTableChanged()

                      • Doing the check in flags() keeps me from modifying the content of the cell (hence, disabling the double-click)
                      • Doing the check in onTableChanged() keeps the cells from being added to the vector of cells that need to be coloured by data()

                      Both checks are identical, but serve for 2 different purposes: one for disabling the double-click, the other for disabling the coloration.

                      All of these events are not sequential. I put a symbol <> in the list above to evidence two apparently unrelated events.

                      If these events had been sequential, I would've written only ONE check at the beginning of the event.

                      So, the question is: should I keep the situation this way (2 checks)?

                      JonBJ Offline
                      JonBJ Offline
                      JonB
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #62

                      @devhobby
                      Yeah, I don't really understand what you're saying, and I don't seem to have the knack of the miraculous correct interpretations @SGaist comes up with :)

                      If I understand right, you should have two different method overloads doing different things for what you want:

                      • data(): when called for BackgroundRole, this will look up your vector of changed cells to determine the desired color.

                      • flags(): when called, this should look up whether this is to be an editable cell, which depends on column (PK/FK versus others), but not your "edited vector". That will determine whether or not it returns Qt::ItemIsEditable. If it's not editable, Qt won't let it get edited.

                      VRoninV 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • JonBJ JonB

                        @devhobby
                        Yeah, I don't really understand what you're saying, and I don't seem to have the knack of the miraculous correct interpretations @SGaist comes up with :)

                        If I understand right, you should have two different method overloads doing different things for what you want:

                        • data(): when called for BackgroundRole, this will look up your vector of changed cells to determine the desired color.

                        • flags(): when called, this should look up whether this is to be an editable cell, which depends on column (PK/FK versus others), but not your "edited vector". That will determine whether or not it returns Qt::ItemIsEditable. If it's not editable, Qt won't let it get edited.

                        VRoninV Offline
                        VRoninV Offline
                        VRonin
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #63

                        @JonB There is one more point: setData should actually do something. QSqlQueryModel::setData is just a return false;

                        "La mort n'est rien, mais vivre vaincu et sans gloire, c'est mourir tous les jours"
                        ~Napoleon Bonaparte

                        On a crusade to banish setIndexWidget() from the holy land of Qt

                        JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • VRoninV VRonin

                          @JonB There is one more point: setData should actually do something. QSqlQueryModel::setData is just a return false;

                          JonBJ Offline
                          JonBJ Offline
                          JonB
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #64

                          @VRonin
                          Yes, he's supposed to know that from when I pointed him at:

                          Ah ha!! Here's what we wanted to know:
                          http://doc.qt.io/qt-5/qsqlquerymodel.html#details

                          The model is read-only by default. To make it read-write, you must subclass it and reimplement setData() and flags(). Another option is to use QSqlTableModel, which provides a read-write model based on a single database table.

                          way earlier! :)

                          1 Reply Last reply
                          0
                          • SGaistS SGaist

                            If you overwrote the flags method correctly, you shouldn't be able to edit the corresponding cell so you shouldn't have to make several checks.

                            devhobbyD Offline
                            devhobbyD Offline
                            devhobby
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #65

                            @SGaist said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

                            If you overwrote the flags method correctly, you shouldn't be able to edit the corresponding cell so you shouldn't have to make several checks.

                            The flag() check is:

                                if(MainWindow::isConstColumn(index.column()))
                                    QAbstractItemModel::flags(index) & (~Qt::ItemIsEditable);
                            
                                else
                                    return QAbstractItemModel::flags(index) | Qt::ItemIsEditable;
                            

                            Qt::ItemIsEditable is only assigned when the cell being modified isn't found in the vector of immutable cells.

                            In data() the check is similar:

                                if (!item.isValid())
                                    return QVariant();
                            
                                if(role == Qt::BackgroundRole)
                                {
                                    if(MainWindow::cellsEdited.contains(item))
                                        return QColor(66, 197, 244, 150);
                                }
                            
                                return QSqlQueryModel::data(item, role);
                            

                            However, removing the check from either part is disastrous:

                            • Removing the check from flags() makes no cell editable
                            • Removing the check from data() makes all the cell blue as soon as the program starts
                            JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • devhobbyD devhobby

                              @SGaist said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

                              If you overwrote the flags method correctly, you shouldn't be able to edit the corresponding cell so you shouldn't have to make several checks.

                              The flag() check is:

                                  if(MainWindow::isConstColumn(index.column()))
                                      QAbstractItemModel::flags(index) & (~Qt::ItemIsEditable);
                              
                                  else
                                      return QAbstractItemModel::flags(index) | Qt::ItemIsEditable;
                              

                              Qt::ItemIsEditable is only assigned when the cell being modified isn't found in the vector of immutable cells.

                              In data() the check is similar:

                                  if (!item.isValid())
                                      return QVariant();
                              
                                  if(role == Qt::BackgroundRole)
                                  {
                                      if(MainWindow::cellsEdited.contains(item))
                                          return QColor(66, 197, 244, 150);
                                  }
                              
                                  return QSqlQueryModel::data(item, role);
                              

                              However, removing the check from either part is disastrous:

                              • Removing the check from flags() makes no cell editable
                              • Removing the check from data() makes all the cell blue as soon as the program starts
                              JonBJ Offline
                              JonBJ Offline
                              JonB
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #66

                              @devhobby said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

                              if(MainWindow::isConstColumn(index.column()))
                                  QAbstractItemModel::flags(index) & (~Qt::ItemIsEditable);
                              

                              There is no return statement there??????

                              devhobbyD 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • JonBJ JonB

                                @devhobby said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

                                if(MainWindow::isConstColumn(index.column()))
                                    QAbstractItemModel::flags(index) & (~Qt::ItemIsEditable);
                                

                                There is no return statement there??????

                                devhobbyD Offline
                                devhobbyD Offline
                                devhobby
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #67

                                @JonB said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

                                @devhobby said in QSqlRelationalTableModel with multiple Joins?:

                                if(MainWindow::isConstColumn(index.column()))
                                    QAbstractItemModel::flags(index) & (~Qt::ItemIsEditable);
                                

                                There is no return statement there??????

                                Just a typo when I posted the code to the forum, the actual code has it.

                                1 Reply Last reply
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