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QT / QML Signals and Slots with C++

Published: 25-02-2021 | Author: Remy van Elst | Text only version of this article


❗ This post is over two years old. It may no longer be up to date. Opinions may have changed.


QT has an Observer mechanism built in, which they call 'Signals and Slots'. It allows objects to communicate with each other without having to have knowledge of either ones internals. By inheriting from QObject and defining a few Q_PROPERTY macro's, the QT Meta Object Compiler (moc) does all the hard work for you. Inside a C++ class this all works handy dandy and is reasonable easy to follow, but when using QML it requires a bit more work. This small example shows you how to bind QML and C++ together using signals and slots, in QT 5.12.

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Below a screenshot of the application. It's nothing more than a simple counter that increments with a button or is set via a text input field, but it is enough to get you started.

screenshot

Because this signal/slot construction is mostly string based, you cannot use the refactoring tools provided by your IDE. If your method is based on value and you want to change value to, lets say, something, you need to change the Q_PROPERTY, the QML usage and bindings and all the regular C++ code. Not very obvious if you're not familiar with how QT signals and slots and QML work.

For fun I compiled this example application to Webassembly as well. You can run it here, or at the bottom of this page it's embedded as an iframe.

Summary

Because this is a small snippet, it lacks the explanation and depth you normally get from my articles. Some code comments are provided, but the QT documentation is recommended reading in this case:

It's explained there very extensive. That is also why I wrote up this summary, due to all the comprehensive documentation, it's hard to get started with something small.

My example code has a C++ class named Counter, with one private long long named m_Value. In the QML file I want to use this class and its methods, including the QT Signal/Slot.

The class must inherit from QObject and you must place the Q_OBJECT macro in the header:

class Counter : public QObject
    {
        Q_OBJECT
        [...]

The methods for setting and getting the value are as you'd expect:

long long value() const { return m_Value; };
[...]
void Counter::setValue(long long value) {
        if (value == m_Value)
            return;
        m_Value = value;
        emit valueChanged(value);
    }

In the above method you see the emit keyword. That's a blank define, for clarity. The function valueChanged() is called. This is our signal, as in the header file:

signals:
    void valueChanged(long long newValue);

The setValue() method is our slot:

public slots:
        void setValue(long long value);

These are accessible to QML by this Q_PROPERTY line:

Q_PROPERTY(long long value READ value WRITE setValue NOTIFY valueChanged)

You could also connect these up to things via QObject::connect() but that is out of this snippets scope. That is for when you use the signaling inside C++.

These lines in main.cpp is also required, it adds your class to QML so to say:

    QQmlApplicationEngine engine;
    Counter myCounter;

    QQmlContext *context = engine.rootContext();
    context->setContextProperty("MyCounter", &myCounter);

After this you can access MyCounter inside of QML as if it was a regular C++ class. FOr example, to call the Counter::value() method:

    Text {
        text: "Counter: " + MyCounter.value + "."
    }    

Or the Counter::setValue() method:

        Button {
            text: qsTr("Set counter to 10")
            // C++ method Counter::setValue(long long), bound via Q_PROPERTY
            onClicked: MyCounter.setValue(10)
        }

Due to the magic of the moc and the extra code it generates via Q_PROPERTY, when you increment like in the below example, it knows which value to increment and has generated correct operator overloads for it:

   Button {
        text: qsTr("Increase Counter")
        onClicked: ++MyCounter.value
    }

You can also receive the C++ signal right in QT. We've defined valueChanged as the signal and via a Connection with onValueChanged (capitals matter here, prefix your method with on and change the first character of your method name to a capital) you can do things in QML. Like below, where I have a local variable that is incremented each time the signal is received:

Text {
    property int changeCount: 0
    id: labelChanged
    text: "Count has changed " + changeCount + " times."
    // Receive the valueChanged NOTIFY
    Connections {
        target: MyCounter
        onValueChanged: {
            ++labelChanged.changeCount
        }
    }
}

For a bi-directional binding example, look at the last TextInput in QML. It shows the current value of the C++ class, updates when the value is updated and when you enter a number, it updates the C++ class.

Example code

Create a project folder and place all the files there under the filenames provided.

The project is also available on github, here.

qmlcppsignalexample.pro

QT += quick

CONFIG += c++11

SOURCES += \
        counter.cpp \
        main.cpp

RESOURCES += qml.qrc

# Additional import path used to resolve QML modules in Qt Creator's code model
QML_IMPORT_PATH =

# Additional import path used to resolve QML modules just for Qt Quick Designer
QML_DESIGNER_IMPORT_PATH =

# Default rules for deployment.
qnx: target.path = /tmp/$${TARGET}/bin
else: unix:!android: target.path = /opt/$${TARGET}/bin
!isEmpty(target.path): INSTALLS += target

HEADERS += \
    counter.h

qml.qrc

<RCC>
    <qresource prefix="/">
        <file>main.qml</file>
    </qresource>
</RCC>

main.cpp

#include <QGuiApplication>
#include <QQmlApplicationEngine>
#include <QObject>
#include <QQmlContext>
#include "counter.h"

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{

    QGuiApplication app(argc, argv);

    QQmlApplicationEngine engine;
    Counter myCounter;

    QQmlContext *context = engine.rootContext();
    /* Below line makes myCounter object and methods available in QML as "MyCounter" */
    context->setContextProperty("MyCounter", &myCounter);

    const QUrl url(QStringLiteral("qrc:/main.qml"));
    QObject::connect(&engine, &QQmlApplicationEngine::objectCreated,
                     &app, [url](QObject *obj, const QUrl &objUrl) {
        if (!obj && url == objUrl)
            QCoreApplication::exit(-1);
    }, Qt::QueuedConnection);

    engine.load(url);
    return app.exec();

}

counter.h

#ifndef COUNTER_H
#define COUNTER_H

#include <QObject>

class Counter : public QObject
{
    Q_OBJECT
    Q_PROPERTY(long long value READ value WRITE setValue NOTIFY valueChanged)
public:
    explicit Counter(QObject *parent = nullptr);
    long long value() const { return m_Value; };

public slots:
    void setValue(long long value);

signals:
    void valueChanged(long long newValue);

private:
    long long m_Value {0} ;
};

#endif // COUNTER_H

counter.cpp

#include "counter.h"

Counter::Counter(QObject* parent) : QObject(parent)
{
}

void Counter::setValue(long long value) {
    if (value == m_Value)
        return;
    m_Value = value;
    emit valueChanged(value);
}

main.qml

import QtQuick 2.11
import QtQuick.Window 2.11
import QtQuick.Controls 2.11

Window {
    width: 640
    height: 480
    visible: true
    title: qsTr("QML Signals and slots example - Raymii.org")

    MenuBar {
        width: parent.width
        Menu {
            title: qsTr("File")
            MenuItem {
                text: qsTr("Exit")
                onTriggered: Qt.quit();
            }
        }
    }

    Column {
        anchors.horizontalCenter: parent.horizontalCenter
        anchors.verticalCenter: parent.verticalCenter
        spacing: 20

        Text {
            id: info
            width: parent.width * 0.9
            wrapMode: Text.WordWrap
            text: "QML / C++ binding via signals and slots example program, by Raymii.org. License: GNU GPLv3"
        }


        Text {
            id: labelCount
            // C++ method Counter::value(). Bound via Q_PROPERTY, updates automatically on change
            text: "Counter: " + MyCounter.value + "."
        }

        Text {
            property int changeCount: 0
            id: labelChanged
            text: "Count has changed " + changeCount + " times."
            // Receive the valueChanged NOTIFY
            Connections {
                target: MyCounter
                onValueChanged: {
                    ++labelChanged.changeCount
                }
            }
        }

        Row {
            spacing: 20
            Button {
                text: qsTr("Increase Counter")
                onClicked: ++MyCounter.value
            }

            Button {
                text: qsTr("Set counter to 10")
                // C++ method Counter::setValue(long long), bound via Q_PROPERTY
                onClicked: MyCounter.setValue(10)
            }

            Button {
                text: qsTr("Reset")
                onClicked: {
                    // C++ method Counter::setValue(long long), bound via Q_PROPERTY
                    MyCounter.setValue(0)
                }
            }
        }

        Row {
            spacing: 20

            Text {
                id: setText
                text: qsTr("Enter counter value: ")
            }
            Rectangle {
                width: setText.width
                height: setText.height
                border.width: 1
                border.color: "black"

                TextInput {
                    id: counterInput
                    focus: true
                    text: MyCounter.value
                }
            }
            // Bi-directional binding, entering a number in the textarea updates the
            // C++ class, if the C++ class is updated, the textarea is updated as well.
            Binding {
                target: MyCounter
                property: "value"
                value: counterInput.text
            }
        }
    }
}

Build / Make

To create the above code, first create a build folder outside of the project:

cd /tmp
mkdir build-qmlexample
cd build-qmlexample

Run qmake, replace the path (/home/remy/tmp/qt/qml_cpp_signal_example/) to your project path:

qmake /home/remy/tmp/qt/qml_cpp_signal_example/qmlcppsignalexample.pro -spec linux-g++ CONFIG+=release && make qmake_all

This example uses qmake, but there should be no trouble using cmake. Not using anything fancy here.

When qmake has finished, you can run make to build the project:

make -j4

After a short while, the binary should be available:

$ file qml_cpp_signal_example 
qml_cpp_signal_example: ELF 64-bit LSB shared object, x86-64, version 1 (GNU/Linux), dynamically linked, interpreter /lib64/ld-linux-x86-64.so.2, BuildID[sha1]=f884f57b90ebf05b51551d42cef5ca3ee52037b4, for GNU/Linux 3.2.0, with debug_info, not stripped

Run it from the commandline:

./qml_cpp_signal_example

QT Webassembly Demo

For fun I compiled the example application to webassembly. Run it here or, if it loads, an iframe below: