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Forum Update on Monday, May 27th 2025

Convert QVariantList to QList<Type> list

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  • M Offline
    M Offline
    mcosta
    wrote on 26 Mar 2015, 22:37 last edited by
    #7

    You can use QVariant directly without conversion because QVariant supports operator==()

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    • S Offline
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      SGaist
      Lifetime Qt Champion
      wrote on 26 Mar 2015, 22:37 last edited by
      #8

      QVariant has the == operator

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      I 1 Reply Last reply 26 Mar 2015, 22:43
      0
      • S SGaist
        26 Mar 2015, 22:37

        QVariant has the == operator

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        ikim
        wrote on 26 Mar 2015, 22:43 last edited by
        #9

        @SGaist yes I could compare each QVariant in the list but that would mean iterating over the entire list to determine if the item exists in the second list. Is that my only option ?

        Thanks

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        • S Offline
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          SGaist
          Lifetime Qt Champion
          wrote on 26 Mar 2015, 22:49 last edited by
          #10

          No, use the QSet features e.g.

          QSet<QVariant> commonSet = mySet1 & mySet2;
          

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          I 1 Reply Last reply 26 Mar 2015, 23:04
          0
          • S SGaist
            26 Mar 2015, 22:49

            No, use the QSet features e.g.

            QSet<QVariant> commonSet = mySet1 & mySet2;
            
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            ikim
            wrote on 26 Mar 2015, 23:04 last edited by
            #11

            @SGaist Thanks, so I can use a QSet<QVariant> out of the box ?

            other forums are suggesting that I need to define a qhash() function for the QVariant.

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            • M Offline
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              mcosta
              wrote on 26 Mar 2015, 23:58 last edited by
              #12

              QSet is based on a hash table; this means that internally it uses qHash()

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              • Mark the thread as SOLVED using the Topic Tool menu
              • Vote up the answer(s) that helped you to solve the issue

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              I 1 Reply Last reply 27 Mar 2015, 08:34
              0
              • I ikim
                26 Mar 2015, 22:02

                Hi All

                I have a QVariantList which is passed as a parameter to my function.

                void myfunc(const QVariantList &list)
                {
                  // I want to convert this to  QList<Type> newList
                  // where Type is the type() of list.at(0)
                  // the variant list consists of variants all of the same type 
                }
                

                What I want to do is

                QList<Type> newList;   //how do I declare this if I dont know the Type
                  foreach(QVariant v, list) 
                    newList << v.value();
                

                Then create a QSet from the newList

                Is there a way of easily achieving this

                Regards

                Ikim

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                MayEnjoy
                wrote on 27 Mar 2015, 05:48 last edited by
                #13

                @ikim why not use QVariant::Type method? even you can use it with c++ template.

                I am a engineer.

                I 1 Reply Last reply 27 Mar 2015, 08:40
                0
                • M mcosta
                  26 Mar 2015, 23:58

                  QSet is based on a hash table; this means that internally it uses qHash()

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                  ikim
                  wrote on 27 Mar 2015, 08:34 last edited by
                  #14

                  @mcosta Thanks but this gives a compile error

                  QSet<QVariant> existingValues;
                  existingValues.insert(1);

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                  • M MayEnjoy
                    27 Mar 2015, 05:48

                    @ikim why not use QVariant::Type method? even you can use it with c++ template.

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                    ikim
                    wrote on 27 Mar 2015, 08:40 last edited by
                    #15

                    @MayEnjoy Thanks, but how would this enable me to achieve my goal ?

                    M 1 Reply Last reply 28 Mar 2015, 07:15
                    0
                    • M Offline
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                      mcosta
                      wrote on 27 Mar 2015, 08:50 last edited by
                      #16

                      Which kind of error?

                      Once your problem is solved don't forget to:

                      • Mark the thread as SOLVED using the Topic Tool menu
                      • Vote up the answer(s) that helped you to solve the issue

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                      I 1 Reply Last reply 27 Mar 2015, 08:55
                      0
                      • M mcosta
                        27 Mar 2015, 08:50

                        Which kind of error?

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                        ikim
                        wrote on 27 Mar 2015, 08:55 last edited by
                        #17

                        @mcosta /usr/include/QtCore/qhash.h:882:24: error: no matching function for call to 'qHash(const QVariant&)'

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                        • M Offline
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                          mcosta
                          wrote on 27 Mar 2015, 09:11 last edited by
                          #18

                          mmmm, You're right.

                          So I suggest to create a template method

                          This code works for me

                          template <typename T>
                          QSet<T> mergeList(const QVariantList& l1, const QVariantList& l2) {
                              QSet<T> s1, s2;
                          
                              for (const QVariant& v: l1) {
                                  s1.insert(v.value<T>());
                              }
                          
                              for (const QVariant& v: l2) {
                                  s2.insert(v.value<T>());
                              }
                          
                              return s1 & s2;
                          }
                          

                          Used as

                              QVariantList l1, l2;
                              l1 << 1 << 2 << 3;
                              l2 << 1 << 3 << 5;
                          
                              QSet<int> s1 = mergeList<int> (l1, l2);
                              qDebug() << s1;
                          
                              l1.clear();
                              l2.clear();
                          
                              l1 << "Foo" << "Bar";
                              l2 << "Bar" << "Fred";
                          
                              QSet<QString> s2 = mergeList<QString> (l1, l2);
                              qDebug() << s2;
                          

                          Once your problem is solved don't forget to:

                          • Mark the thread as SOLVED using the Topic Tool menu
                          • Vote up the answer(s) that helped you to solve the issue

                          You can embed images using (http://imgur.com/) or (http://postimage.org/)

                          I 1 Reply Last reply 27 Mar 2015, 09:30
                          1
                          • M mcosta
                            27 Mar 2015, 09:11

                            mmmm, You're right.

                            So I suggest to create a template method

                            This code works for me

                            template <typename T>
                            QSet<T> mergeList(const QVariantList& l1, const QVariantList& l2) {
                                QSet<T> s1, s2;
                            
                                for (const QVariant& v: l1) {
                                    s1.insert(v.value<T>());
                                }
                            
                                for (const QVariant& v: l2) {
                                    s2.insert(v.value<T>());
                                }
                            
                                return s1 & s2;
                            }
                            

                            Used as

                                QVariantList l1, l2;
                                l1 << 1 << 2 << 3;
                                l2 << 1 << 3 << 5;
                            
                                QSet<int> s1 = mergeList<int> (l1, l2);
                                qDebug() << s1;
                            
                                l1.clear();
                                l2.clear();
                            
                                l1 << "Foo" << "Bar";
                                l2 << "Bar" << "Fred";
                            
                                QSet<QString> s2 = mergeList<QString> (l1, l2);
                                qDebug() << s2;
                            
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                            ikim
                            wrote on 27 Mar 2015, 09:30 last edited by
                            #19

                            @mcosta Thanks for your effort, but this still doesn't solve the problem as I dont know the Type at compile time

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                            • M Offline
                              M Offline
                              mcosta
                              wrote on 27 Mar 2015, 10:46 last edited by
                              #20

                              Hi,

                              I'm not a C++ super-guru but I don't think you can do it because the compiler must know the type of each variable at compile time.

                              A solution could be implement qHash(const QVariant &v) and use QSet<QVariant>

                              Once your problem is solved don't forget to:

                              • Mark the thread as SOLVED using the Topic Tool menu
                              • Vote up the answer(s) that helped you to solve the issue

                              You can embed images using (http://imgur.com/) or (http://postimage.org/)

                              I 1 Reply Last reply 27 Mar 2015, 10:49
                              1
                              • M mcosta
                                27 Mar 2015, 10:46

                                Hi,

                                I'm not a C++ super-guru but I don't think you can do it because the compiler must know the type of each variable at compile time.

                                A solution could be implement qHash(const QVariant &v) and use QSet<QVariant>

                                I Offline
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                                ikim
                                wrote on 27 Mar 2015, 10:49 last edited by
                                #21

                                @mcosta thanks for your time, I think you may be right :)

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                                • I ikim
                                  27 Mar 2015, 08:40

                                  @MayEnjoy Thanks, but how would this enable me to achieve my goal ?

                                  M Offline
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                                  MayEnjoy
                                  wrote on 28 Mar 2015, 07:15 last edited by
                                  #22

                                  @ikim said:

                                  @SGaist yes I could compare each QVariant in the list but that would mean iterating over the entire list to determine if the item exists in the second list. Is that my only option ?

                                  Thanks

                                  I think @mclark 's answer is the better one.

                                  I am a engineer.

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                                  0
                                  • S Offline
                                    S Offline
                                    SGaist
                                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                                    wrote on 28 Mar 2015, 21:32 last edited by
                                    #23

                                    You can also implement qHash for the type you need to support and thus it will be used automatically in all your software.

                                    #include <QtDebug>
                                    
                                    inline uint qHash(const QVariant &key, uint seed = 0)
                                    {
                                        switch (key.userType()) {
                                            case QVariant::Int:
                                                return qHash(key.toInt(), seed);
                                    
                                            case QVariant::UInt:
                                                return qHash(key.toUInt(), seed);
                                    
                                           // add all cases you want to support;
                                    
                                        }
                                    
                                        return 0;
                                    }
                                    
                                    int main( int argc, char * argv[] )
                                    {
                                        QApplication app( argc, argv );
                                        QVariantList vl1;
                                        QVariantList vl2;
                                    
                                        for (int i = 0 ; i < 5 ; ++i) {
                                            vl1 << i;
                                        }
                                    
                                        for (int i = 0 ; i < 3 ; ++i) {
                                            vl2 << i;
                                        }
                                    
                                        qDebug() << (vl1.toSet() & vl2.toSet());
                                    
                                        return 0;
                                    }
                                    

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                                    Please read the Qt Code of Conduct - https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

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