I am having problems with QImages and Qthreads.
I am trying to load big images in a Thread and then display them as QPixmap on a QLabel.
My problem is that as long as I don't use a different thread to load the QImages, everything is perfect but as soon as I use a different thread, nothing is renderder.
Though I still have a valid size for my QImage.
The thing that puzzles me is that, if I just comment the 22nd line in the cpp that moves the loader to the other thread, the label displays nicely.
Does anyone have an idea?
Here is my very simplified code:
Header :
class Loader : public QObject
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
explicit Loader(QObject *parent = 0);
signals:
void imageLoaded(QString, const QImage &);
public slots:
void loadImage(const QString& fichier);
};
namespace Ui {
class MainWindow;
}
class LoaderImages;
class MainWindow : public QMainWindow
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
explicit MainWindow(QWidget *parent = 0);
~MainWindow();
signals:
void loadImage(const QString& dossier);
private slots:
void imageAvailable(const QString& dossier, const QImage& img);
private:
Ui::MainWindow *ui;
//QString mDossier;
Loader* mLoader;
//QMap<QString, QImage*> mMapDesImages;
int mWidth;
};
cpp:
#include "mainwindow.h"
#include "ui_mainwindow.h"
#include <QFile>
#include <QPixmap>
#include <QImage>
#include <QDir>
#include <QThread>
#include <QDebug>
#include <QLabel>
MainWindow::MainWindow(QWidget *parent) :
QMainWindow(parent),
ui(new Ui::MainWindow),
mLoader(new Loader(NULL)),
mWidth(0)
{
ui->setupUi(this);
QThread* thread = new QThread(this);
mLoader->moveToThread(thread);
thread->start();
connect(this, SIGNAL(loadImage(QString)), mLoader, SLOT(loadImage(QString)));
connect(mLoader, SIGNAL(imageLoaded(QString,QImage)), this, SLOT(imageAvailable(QString,QImage)));
emit loadImage("C:/img.jpg");
}
void MainWindow::imageAvailable(const QString &dossier, const QImage& img)
{
mWidth += (img.width() + 20);
ui->mScrollContent->setMinimumSize(mWidth,img.height());
QLabel* lab = new QLabel(ui->mScrollContent);
lab->setFixedSize(img.width(), img.height());
lab->setGeometry(mWidth - img.width() + 20, 0, img.width(), img.height());
lab->setPixmap(QPixmap::fromImage(img));
}
MainWindow::~MainWindow()
{
delete mLoader;
delete ui;
}
Loader::Loader(QObject *parent) :
QObject(parent)
{
}
void Loader::loadImage(const QString& fichier)
{
QImage* image = new QImage(fichier);
emit imageLoaded(fichier, *image);
}
Thx!
There are several mistakes:
You're not showing the label. When the image loader is in the GUI thread, the image is loaded and the label added to the contents pane before the main window is shown. Since the parent is shown, the children become visible.
When the loading is done in another thread, you'll be adding image labels to a widget that's already shown. Such child widgets are not visible unless you explicitly show() them.
You're leaking the image in loadImage. There's no reason to put that QImage on the heap.
You're allowing a running QThread to be destructed. That's a common error since QThread is essentially broken by design. Sane C++ classes should be always destructible. QThread isn't. Thus you need a workaround.
You're not setting the minimum height of the contents widget as well.
You might wish to consider the use QtConcurrent::run instead of a dedicated thread. This is especially worthwhile when the operation you're undertaking is a one liner, more or less. I've shown both, the implementations are alternated between at runtime. Note that you need to add the concurrent module and CONFIG += c++11 to the project file.
Style bugs:
There's no reason to pass NULL for default-valued parameters that are already zero.
There's no reason to keep QObject members that have the lifetime of the parent object on the heap, if such members are constructed along with the parent object.
Just because Qt Creator comes with silly template files doesn't mean that you shouldn't be using a std::unique_ptr or QScopedPointer to hold the ui member. Naked pointers should almost never be members unless they're pointers to QObjects with parents.
As quite a bit of the code is missing, I can't really tell what else might be wrong. Below is a complete example.
// https://github.com/KubaO/stackoverflown/tree/master/questions/image-loader-24853687
#include <QtWidgets>
#include <QtConcurrent>
class Thread final : public QThread {
public:
~Thread() { quit(); wait(); }
};
class Loader : public QObject
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
explicit Loader(QObject *parent = nullptr) : QObject(parent) {}
Q_SIGNAL void imageLoaded(const QString &, const QImage &);
Q_SLOT void loadImage(const QString& fichier) {
QImage img(fichier);
if (! img.isNull()) emit imageLoaded(fichier, img);
}
};
class MainWindow : public QWidget
{
Q_OBJECT
Loader m_loader;
Thread m_loaderThread;
QGridLayout m_layout{this};
QPushButton m_open{"Open"};
QScrollArea m_view;
QWidget m_content;
int m_width{};
bool m_threadImpl = true;
Q_SIGNAL void loadImage(const QString &);
Q_SIGNAL void imageLoaded(const QString &, const QImage & img);
Q_SLOT void imageAvailable(const QString &, const QImage & img) {
int spacing = 20;
if (m_width) m_width += spacing;
auto lab = new QLabel(&m_content);
lab->setFixedSize(img.width(), img.height());
lab->setGeometry(m_width, 0, img.width(), img.height());
lab->setPixmap(QPixmap::fromImage(img));
lab->show();
m_width += img.width();
m_content.setMinimumWidth(m_width);
m_content.setMinimumHeight(qMax(m_content.minimumHeight(), img.height()));
}
Q_SLOT void open() {
auto dialog = new QFileDialog(this);
dialog->setAttribute(Qt::WA_DeleteOnClose);
dialog->show();
if (m_threadImpl)
connect(dialog, &QFileDialog::fileSelected, this, &MainWindow::loadImage);
else
connect(dialog, &QFileDialog::fileSelected, [this](const QString & fichier){
QtConcurrent::run([this, fichier]{
QImage img(fichier);
if (! img.isNull()) emit this->imageLoaded(fichier, img);
});
});
m_threadImpl = !m_threadImpl;
}
public:
explicit MainWindow(QWidget *parent = nullptr) : QWidget(parent) {
m_layout.addWidget(&m_open);
m_layout.addWidget(&m_view);
m_view.setWidget(&m_content);
m_loader.moveToThread(&m_loaderThread);
m_loaderThread.start();
connect(&m_open, &QPushButton::clicked, this, &MainWindow::open);
connect(this, &MainWindow::loadImage, &m_loader, &Loader::loadImage);
connect(this, &MainWindow::imageLoaded, this, &MainWindow::imageAvailable);
connect(&m_loader, &Loader::imageLoaded, this, &MainWindow::imageAvailable);
}
};
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
QApplication a(argc, argv);
MainWindow w;
w.show();
return a.exec();
}
#include "main.moc"
Related
I have written a project which includes a mainwindow and a replacedlg.ui. I want to use replacedlg.ui in mainwindow.cpp.
I'd like to write things like ui->button in mainwindow.cpp, but I can't.
Who can help me make this work?
The whole project is here.
Don't try to share the ui variable between classes. It is bad design. Instead add methods in your classes which will let you do what you need to do.
In your case where you want to send the text of your line edit from replaceDlg class to your MainWindow class, you should use signals and slots. Here is an example:
#include <QtWidgets>
class MainWindow : public QMainWindow
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
MainWindow(QWidget *parent = Q_NULLPTR) : QMainWindow(parent)
{
setCentralWidget(&text_edit);
}
public slots:
void addText(const QString &text)
{
text_edit.append(text);
}
private:
QTextEdit text_edit;
};
class Dialog : public QDialog
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
Dialog(QWidget *parent = Q_NULLPTR) : QDialog(parent)
{
setLayout(new QHBoxLayout);
QPushButton *send_button = new QPushButton("Send");
layout()->addWidget(&line_edit);
layout()->addWidget(send_button);
connect(send_button, &QPushButton::clicked, this, &Dialog::sendButtonClicked);
}
signals:
void sendText(const QString &text);
private slots:
void sendButtonClicked()
{
emit sendText(line_edit.text());
accept();
}
private:
QLineEdit line_edit;
};
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
QApplication a(argc, argv);
MainWindow w;
Dialog d;
QObject::connect(&d, &Dialog::sendText, &w, &MainWindow::addText);
w.show();
d.show();
return a.exec();
}
#include "main.moc"
I wrote a minimal working example of the problem and I believe it might be a Qt bug. But just in case I wanted to ask.
Here are My classes:
mydialog.h
#include <QDialog>
#include <QVBoxLayout>
#include <QLabel>
class MyDialog : public QDialog
{
public:
MyDialog(QWidget *parent = 0);
};
mydialog.cpp
#include "mydialog.h"
MyDialog::MyDialog(QWidget *parent):QDialog(parent)
{
QLabel *label = new QLabel("Some random dialog",this);
QVBoxLayout *layout = new QVBoxLayout();
layout->addWidget(label);
this->setLayout(layout);
}
myitem.h
#include <QGraphicsTextItem>
#include <QPainter>
#include <QDebug>
#include "mydialog.h"
class MyItem : public QGraphicsItem
{
public:
MyItem();
void paint(QPainter * painter, const QStyleOptionGraphicsItem * option, QWidget * widget = 0);
QRectF boundingRect() const {return boundingBox;}
void setMyDialog(MyDialog *d){ dialog = d; }
private:
QRectF boundingBox;
MyDialog *dialog;
protected:
void mousePressEvent(QGraphicsSceneMouseEvent *e);
};
myitem.cpp
MyItem::MyItem()
{
boundingBox = QRectF(0,0,200,100);
}
void MyItem::paint(QPainter *painter, const QStyleOptionGraphicsItem *option, QWidget *widget){
painter->setBrush(QBrush(Qt::red));
painter->drawRect(boundingBox);
}
void MyItem::mousePressEvent(QGraphicsSceneMouseEvent *e){
//dialog->exec(); // BUG
//dialog->open(); // BUG
dialog->show(); // WORKS!
}
test.h
#include "myitem.h"
namespace Ui {
class Test;
}
class Test : public QMainWindow
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
explicit Test(QWidget *parent = 0);
~Test();
protected:
void resizeEvent(QResizeEvent *e);
private:
Ui::Test *ui;
MyDialog *diag;
};
And test.cpp
Test::Test(QWidget *parent) :
QMainWindow(parent),
ui(new Ui::Test)
{
ui->setupUi(this);
ui->graphicsView->setScene(new QGraphicsScene(this));
diag = new MyDialog(this);
}
void Test::resizeEvent(QResizeEvent *e){
ui->graphicsView->setSceneRect(0,0,ui->graphicsView->width(),ui->graphicsView->height());
ui->graphicsView->scene()->clear();
MyItem *item = new MyItem();
item->setMyDialog(diag);
ui->graphicsView->scene()->addItem(item);
}
Test::~Test()
{
delete ui;
}
So here is what happens (tested on Qt 5.7 and Qt 5.6). If the dialog is opened with either exec or open then, after it is closed ALL further mouse clicks ANYWHERE on the screen will open up the dialog again, making it impossible to interact with anything else drawn in there. This happens ONLY after it is opened for the first time. If i resize the screen, the item is recreated and I can click normally again. If I again click on the red box, then again all further clicks anywhere on the screen open up the dialog
However if the Dialog is opened by show, then it works as expected, only showing again if I click on the red rectangle.
Now the obvious problem is that exec make the dialog block execution until it is closed, but show doesn't. I can program around this using signals, but my question is why? and Is this a bug?
It seems that MyItem's reimplementation of mousePressEvent needs some behavior provided by default implementation. Here is the code, works fine in my machine:
void MyItem::mousePressEvent(QGraphicsSceneMouseEvent *event){
dialog->exec(); // WORKS
//dialog->open(); // WORKS
//dialog->show(); // WORKS
QGraphicsItem::mousePressEvent(event);
}
I am saving an image of a QQuickWidget with several QML children but all I have is a blank image.
C++ side:
QQuickWidget* content..
content->setSource(QUrl("qml:/main.qml"));
QPixmap *pm = content->grab(QRect(QPoint(0,0),QSize(-1,-1));
pm->save("someFilename.png", 0, 100);
QML side:
Rectangle{ width: 5; height: 5; color: "yellow"; objectname: "rootobj"}
In the QML I wish to dynamically add children and be able to show them in the image. I have tried QQuickWindow grabWindow method with a connection to a slot and it works but it captures only the window visible area and I need to capture the whole QML.
I believe this is not rocket science just that I am not getting it somewhere. Thanks for your replies!
Addendum:
Ok, I do not think its the issue of before/after rendering since I can see all the qml children before I call the picture grabber. So sorry for not being precise.
c++ side:
QQuickWidget* content..
content->setSource(QUrl("qml:/main.qml"));
//do all my dynamic qml children adding
After I can visually see all my qml:
QPixmap *pm = content->grab(QRect(QPoint(0,0),QSize(-1,-1));
pm->save(....
Unless I am wrong, I dont think its rendering issue. Thank you!
Issue is like Mido said. You can solve it like follows.
Create a class Viewer:
viewer.h
class Viewer : public QQuickView{
Q_OBJECT
public:
explicit Viewer(QWindow *parent = 0);
Viewer(bool showBar);
virtual ~Viewer();
void setMainQmlFile(const QString file);
void addImportPath(const QString path);
public slots:
void beforeRendering();
void afterRendering()
}
Viewer.cpp
#include "viewer.h"
Viewer::Viewer(QWindow *parent)
: QQuickView(parent)
{
setWidth(800);
setHeight(480);
connect(this, SIGNAL(beforeRendering()), this, SLOT(beforeRendering()));
connect(this, SIGNAL(afterRendering()), this, SLOT(afterRendering()));
}
void Viewer::setMainQmlFile(const QString file)
{
setSource(QUrl::fromLocalFile(file));
}
void Viewer::addImportPath(const QString path)
{
engine()->addImportPath(path);
}
void Viewer::beforeRendering()
{
//
}
void Viewer::afterRendering()
{
//grab window
QImage img = this->grabWindow();
img.save(path);
//or your code
}
main.cpp
Viewer *viewer = new Viewer;
//
///
//
viewer->setMainQmlFile(QStringLiteral("qml/main.qml"));
viewer->show();
I think your issue is that the capture screen is done before the rendering of the QML object.
In order to make it work you should connect the grab of the signal after rendering signal:
connect(this, SIGNAL(beforeRendering()), this, SLOT(sltBeforeRendering()));
connect(this, SIGNAL(afterRendering()), this, SLOT(sltAfterRendering()));
do the grab in sltAfterRendering slot.
To grab screen I use the grabWindow() function and I call it from QML.
It depends on the behaviour that you want from your software.
Try this:
grabber.h
#ifndef GRABBER_H
#define GRABBER_H
#include <QObject>
#include <QImage>
#include <QQuickView>
class Grabber : public QObject
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
explicit Grabber(QObject *parent = 0);
Grabber(QQuickView *view);
~Grabber();
Q_INVOKABLE void capture(QString const &path) const;
signals:
public slots:
private:
QQuickView* view_;
};
#endif // GRABBER_H
grabber.cpp
#include "grabber.h"
Grabber::Grabber(QObject *parent) :
QObject(parent)
{
}
Grabber::Grabber(QQuickView* view) :
view_(view)
{
}
Grabber::~Grabber()
{
if(view_ != NULL)
{
delete view_;
view_ = NULL;
}
}
void Grabber::capture(QString const &path) const
{
QImage img = view_->grabWindow();
img.save(path);
}
main.cpp
#include <QtGui/QGuiApplication>
#include "qtquick2applicationviewer.h"
#include <QQmlContext>
#include <QQmlEngine>
#include "grabber.h"
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
QGuiApplication app(argc, argv);
QtQuick2ApplicationViewer *viewer = new QtQuick2ApplicationViewer;
Grabber * grab = new Grabber(viewer);
viewer->setHeight(480);
viewer->setWidth(800);
viewer->rootContext()->setContextProperty("grab", grab);
viewer->setMainQmlFile(QStringLiteral("qml/main.qml"));
viewer->showExpanded();
return app.exec();
}
Call it from QML with:
grab.capture(path + "imageName.png")
A experienced the following bug in Qt 4.8.5, under Ubuntu 13.04 (and I'm nem to Qt)
I have have an application with the following structure:
Mainwondow
-CentralWidget
--VerticalLayout
---TabWidget
---QLabel (created with code, and added to the layout)
---StatusBar
In fullscreen mode I hide the TabWidget, and the Statusbar, then the QLabel stops refreshing. (i have a thread to do the refresh) The strange thing is, when i restore the TabWidget or the StatusBar it works fine. It also works good, if i add a 1x1 pixel label to the VerticalLayout.
The slot responsible for the gui change;
void Mainview::onToggleFullScreen()
{
if (this->isFullScreen())
{
this->showNormal();
this->statusbar->show();
this->tabWidget->show();
}
else
{
this->showFullScreen();
this->statusbar->hide();
this->tabWidget->hide();
}
}
But the thing I cant understand if I put a QLabel near the image, it works, and if I add this single line to the MainWindow constructor, it stops refreshing:
label_10->hide(); //this is the label
Any idea what is the problem?
(Thanks in advance)
You're probably doing it in some wrong way, but you don't show the code, so how can we know?
Below is a safe SSCCE of how one might do it. Works under both Qt 4.8 and 5.1.
Nitpick: The status bar should not be a part of the centralWidget()! QMainWindow provides a statusBar() for you.
The only safe way of passing images between threads is via QImage. You can not use QPixmap anywhere but in the GUI thread. End of story right there.
In the example below, all of the important stuff happens behind the scenes. The DrawThing QObject lives in another thread. This QThread's default implementation of the run() method spins a message loop. That's why the timer can fire, you need a spinning message loop for that.
Every time the new image is generated, it is transmitted to the GUI thread by implicitly posting a message to MainWindow. The message is received by Qt event loop code and re-synthesized into a slot call. This is done since the two ends of a connection (DrawThing and MainWindow instances) live in different threads.
That the beauty of Qt's "code less, create more" approach to design :) The more you leverage what Qt does for you, the less you need to worry about the boilerplate.
//main.cpp
#include <QMainWindow>
#include <QVBoxLayout>
#include <QStatusBar>
#include <QLabel>
#include <QThread>
#include <QPainter>
#include <QImage>
#include <QApplication>
#include <QBasicTimer>
#include <QPushButton>
class DrawThing : public QObject {
Q_OBJECT
int m_ctr;
QBasicTimer t;
void timerEvent(QTimerEvent * ev) {
if (ev->timerId() != t.timerId()) return;
QImage img(128, 128, QImage::Format_RGB32);
QPainter p(&img);
p.translate(img.size().width()/2, img.size().height()/2);
p.scale(img.size().width()/2, img.size().height()/2);
p.eraseRect(-1, -1, 2, 2);
p.setBrush(Qt::NoBrush);
p.setPen(QPen(Qt::black, 0.05));
p.drawEllipse(QPointF(), 0.9, 0.9);
p.rotate(m_ctr*360/12);
p.setPen(QPen(Qt::red, 0.1));
p.drawLine(0, 0, 0, 1);
m_ctr = (m_ctr + 1) % 12;
emit newImage(img);
}
public:
explicit DrawThing(QObject *parent = 0) : QObject(parent), m_ctr(0) { t.start(1000, this); }
Q_SIGNAL void newImage(const QImage &);
};
class MainWindow : public QMainWindow {
Q_OBJECT
QLabel *m_label;
public:
explicit MainWindow(QWidget *parent = 0, Qt::WindowFlags flags = 0) : QMainWindow(parent, flags) {
QWidget * cw = new QWidget;
QTabWidget * tw = new QTabWidget();
QVBoxLayout * l = new QVBoxLayout(cw);
l->addWidget(tw);
l->addWidget(m_label = new QLabel("Label"));
setCentralWidget(cw);
QPushButton * pb = new QPushButton("Toggle Status Bar");
tw->addTab(pb, "Tab 1");
connect(pb, SIGNAL(clicked()), SLOT(toggleStatusBar()));
statusBar()->showMessage("The Status Bar");
}
Q_SLOT void setImage(const QImage & img) {
m_label->setPixmap(QPixmap::fromImage(img));
}
Q_SLOT void toggleStatusBar() {
statusBar()->setHidden(!statusBar()->isHidden());
}
};
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
QApplication a(argc, argv);
QThread t;
DrawThing thing;
MainWindow w;
thing.moveToThread(&t);
t.start();
w.connect(&thing, SIGNAL(newImage(QImage)), SLOT(setImage(QImage)));
w.show();
t.connect(&a, SIGNAL(aboutToQuit()), SLOT(quit()));
int rc = a.exec();
t.wait();
return rc;
}
#include "main.moc"
I have built an app in Qt that contains two buttons: an exit button and an import button. When the import button is pushed, a list of buttons is shown in a scrollarea on the screen (the file loggers.csv contains the data 1;2;3;4;5;).
It all works fine, but when I push the exit button (which of course should close everything), the app is not stopped properly (the stop button of Qt is still active, and the play button isn't). When I run the debugger and push the exit button it gives an error: Invalid address specified to RtlFreeHeap( 0ADF0000, 0028FE40 ). Can anybody help me?
main
#include <QtGui/QApplication>
#include "mainwindow.h"
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
QApplication a(argc, argv);
MainWindow w;
w.showFullScreen();
return a.exec();
}
Mainwindow.h
#ifndef MAINWINDOW_H
#define MAINWINDOW_H
#include <QMainWindow>
#include <QtGui>
#include "logger.h"
namespace Ui {
class MainWindow;
}
class MainWindow : public QMainWindow
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
explicit MainWindow(QWidget *parent = 0);
~MainWindow();
QPushButton exit_btn;
QPushButton import_btn;
private slots:
void createMenus();
void exit();
void import();
private:
int window_width;
int window_height;
int numLoggers;
int numSelected;
QVector<Logger*> loggers;
QScrollArea * scroll_area;
QVBoxLayout scrollLayout;
QWidget viewport;
Ui::MainWindow *ui;
};
#endif // MAINWINDOW_H
Mainwindow.cpp:
#include "mainwindow.h"
#include "ui_mainwindow.h"
#include "QtGui"
MainWindow::MainWindow(QWidget *parent) :
QMainWindow(parent),
ui(new Ui::MainWindow)
{
ui->setupUi(this);
window_width = QApplication::desktop()->width();
window_height = QApplication::desktop()->height();
createMenus();
connect(&exit_btn,SIGNAL(clicked()),this,SLOT(exit()));
connect(&import_btn,SIGNAL(clicked()),this,SLOT(import()));
}
MainWindow::~MainWindow()
{
delete ui;
}
void MainWindow::createMenus()
{
import_btn.setParent(ui->centralWidget);
import_btn.setGeometry(400,300,100,100);
import_btn.setText("IMPORT");
exit_btn.setText("EXIT");
exit_btn.setParent(ui->centralWidget);
exit_btn.setGeometry(window_width-50,12,32,32);
viewport.setLayout(&scrollLayout);
viewport.resize(0,0);
scroll_area = new QScrollArea(ui->centralWidget);
scroll_area->setGeometry(0,66,317,window_height-116);
scroll_area->setVerticalScrollBarPolicy(Qt::ScrollBarAlwaysOff);
scroll_area->setHorizontalScrollBarPolicy(Qt::ScrollBarAlwaysOff);
scroll_area->setWidget(&viewport);
scroll_area->setGeometry(0,97,317,window_height-228);
scrollLayout.setMargin(0);
scrollLayout.setSpacing(0);
}
void MainWindow::exit()
{
close();
qApp->quit();
}
void MainWindow::import()
{
numSelected=0;
QFile f("Loggers3.csv");
if (f.open(QIODevice::ReadOnly))
{
numLoggers=0;
QString data;
data = f.readAll();
QStringList vals = data.split(';');
while(vals.size()>=1)
{
Logger * logger = new Logger;
logger->setNumber(vals[0].toInt());
vals.removeAt(0);
loggers<<logger;
numLoggers++;
}
f.close();
for(int i=0; i<numLoggers;i++)
{
loggers[i]->createButtons();
scrollLayout.addWidget(loggers[i]->button);
}
viewport.resize(367,numLoggers*60);
}
}
logger.h
#ifndef LOGGER_H
#define LOGGER_H
#include <QtGui>
class Logger : public QWidget
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
explicit Logger(QWidget *parent = 0);
~Logger();
int number;
QLabel num;
QToolButton * button;
bool checked;
signals:
public slots:
void setNumber(int number);
void createButtons();
};
#endif // LOGGER_H
logger.cpp
#include "logger.h"
#include <QtGui>
Logger::Logger(QWidget *parent) :
QWidget(parent)
{
button = new QToolButton;
button->setCheckable(true);
button->setMinimumSize(317,60);
button->setStyleSheet("QToolButton{background-image: url(images/btn_bg); border:none}");
}
Logger::~Logger()
{
}
void Logger::setNumber(int logNumber)
{
number=logNumber;
}
void Logger::createButtons()
{
QLayout * layout = new QHBoxLayout;
QSpacerItem *spacer = new QSpacerItem(120, 31, QSizePolicy::Maximum, SizePolicy::Maximum);
num.setStyleSheet("color: white; font: bold 16px");
num.setText(QString::number(number));
layout->addWidget(&num);
layout->addItem(spacer);
button->setLayout(layout);
}
I'm not entirely certain about what you are trying to achieve... but your problem lies with these two lines:
viewport.setLayout(&scrollLayout);
viewport.resize(0,0);
In the documentation for the QWidget class it states that:
If there already is a layout manager installed on this widget, QWidget
won't let you install another. You must first delete the existing layout manager (returned by layout()) before you can call setLayout() with the new layout.
This is where your problem lies. Don't believe me, add this check before those two lines of code.
if(layout()){
qDebug() << "Another layout exists";
}
Source: QVBoxLayout Class Reference
The QVBoxLayout class lines up widgets vertically.
This class is used to construct vertical box layout objects. See QBoxLayout for details.
The simplest use of the class is like this:
QWidget *window = new QWidget;
QPushButton *button1 = new QPushButton("One");
QPushButton *button2 = new QPushButton("Two");
QPushButton *button3 = new QPushButton("Three");
QPushButton *button4 = new QPushButton("Four");
QPushButton *button5 = new QPushButton("Five");
QVBoxLayout *layout = new QVBoxLayout;
layout->addWidget(button1);
layout->addWidget(button2);
layout->addWidget(button3);
layout->addWidget(button4);
layout->addWidget(button5);
window->setLayout(layout);
window->show();
First, we create the widgets we want in the layout. Then, we create the QVBoxLayout object and add the widgets into the layout. Finally, we call QWidget::setLayout() to install the QVBoxLayout object onto the widget. At that point, the widgets in the layout are reparented to have window as their parent.
Critical source of error in your project:
Widgets should be constructed on the heap because they will be deleted automatically when their parents are deleted. You have a custom widget class that you instantiate on the heap. The members should also go on the heap. Also, you should consider using the parent /child hierarchy in your GUI code to ensure proper memory management and proper deletion.
In my experience, if your program stops in RtlFreeHeap it is a good sign of memory corruption.
When calling
import_btn.setParent(ui->centralWidget);
centralWidget takes ownership of import_btn. That means, when centralWidget is deleted (which happens as part of delete ui;in your MainWindow's destructor), it will call delete on your member variable!
This leads to the reported memory corruption.
You need to allocate your QPushButton's dynamically, not as a plain member variable. So make them QPushButton*.
Here's how I did it from mainwindow.cpp, thanks to and this question: How to create a correct exit button in qt
QPushButton * quit_btn = new QPushButton(this);
quit_btn->setGeometry(540,440,93,27);
quit_btn->setText("Exit");
QObject::connect(quit_btn,SIGNAL(clicked()),qApp,SLOT(quit()));
Works flawlessly :D