How to repaint QWidget encapsulated in QDeclarativeItem in QML?
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@p3c0 I created a timer in my QML item, which calls this function periodically:
void FlowGrafik::refresh() { qDebug() << "refreshed"; customPlot->replot(); customPlot->repaint(); this->update(); }
addFlow
still gets called from the C++ code periodically and changes the plot values.The weird thing is that whatever I write in the constructor of
FlowGrafik
gets displayed perfectly. I even tried to delete all internal objects ofFlowGrafik
in theaddFlow
function, likeQGraphicsProxyWidget
andcustomPlot
, and I created new ones, but the results are the same. Only the code I write in the constructor gets displayed, and my QML Item never gets updated.Could the root of the problem be the fact that I load the QML code from a
QmlApplicationViewer
?main.cpp:
QmlApplicationViewer flowView; flowView.setSource(QUrl("qrc:///qml/qml/FlowView.qml"));
FlowView.qml:
import QtQuick 1.1 import FlowGrafik 1.0 Rectangle { id: flowGrafik objectName: "FlowGrafikRect" x: 0 y: 0 width: 200 height: 200 radius: 10 Timer { interval: 500; running: true; repeat: true onTriggered: flowGrafikItem.refresh() } FlowGrafik { id: flowGrafikItem objectName: "FlowGrafik" } }
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@Chillax After having a quick look at the
QCustomPlot
's API, I foundQCustomPlot
has toPainter method which accepts a QCPPainter as an argument. ThisQCPPainter
in turn accepts aQPaintDevice
argument which can be aQImage
orQPixmap
which means theQCustomPlot
can be rendered onto an image or pixmap.
So after rendering thisQCustomPlot
's data into an image/pixmap you can periodically call update and re-paint this image/pixmap inside the re-implementedpaint
method and which will definitely updated on the QML side. -
@p3c0 Thank you so much for the tip! We are getting really close!
So I reimplemented thepaint
method of my customQDeclarativeItem
,FlowGrafik
, like this:void FlowGrafik::paint(QPainter* painter) { if (customPlot) { qDebug() << "paint"; QPixmap picture(200,200); QCPPainter qcpPainter(&picture); customPlot->replot(); customPlot->toPainter(&qcpPainter); painter->drawPixmap(QPoint(), picture); } }
Unfortunately the results are the same, but I found out that the
paint
method never gets called! (I didn't see the "paint" at the application output). I tried calling it in therefresh()
function like this:this->paint(new QPainter);
, and then I saw the "paint" at the application output, but the graph still did not replot. Any ideas on how to move on? -
@p3c0 Yes, I call
update
periodically, but that does not callpaint
void FlowGrafik::refresh() { qDebug() << "refresh"; customPlot->replot(); customPlot->repaint(); this->update(); }
I see "refresh" at the application output, but I don't see "paint". The question is why doesn't
update
callpaint
? -
@Chillax It should actually.
http://doc.qt.io/qt-4.8/qgraphicsitem.html#paintingDepending on whether or not the item is visible in a view, the item may or may not be repainted
Well I guess the Item is visible.
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@p3c0 FML :D The item is indeed visible. But it didn't help to hide it before the update and then show it again.
I saved the pixmap to a jpg file, and it looks just as I expect it to look like. So the problem is that the QML won't repaint the
QDeclaretiveItem
, because it is visible... Can you think of a better solution for displaying myQCustomPlot Qwidget
? I am pretty sure this is possibe in QML, and it shouldn't be this hard. -
So the problem is that the QML won't repaint the QDeclaretiveItem, because it is visible...
No. It's useless painting invisible objects.
Can you try following ?
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On the QML side specify
width
andheight
forFlowGrafik
item. May be this could be the reason the item is not painted i.e havingwidth
andheight
as0
is close to having an invisible item. -
Create a very minimal project with
QDeclarativeItem
and without usingQCustomPlot
and keeping rest the same. This is to make sure ifpaint
method is invoked atleast in this case. I dont have Qt 4.8 at hand so I can't test. Have moved to Qt5 long time back :)
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@p3c0 Unfortunately specifying with and height did not solve the issue.
I created a minimal project (with QtQuick Application template). It is using QCustomPlot and everything works fine. But this is a Desktop version, and if I am not mistaken it is using Qt 5.3, but I need it to work on my embedded linux Qt 4.8 version.
The embedded linux version usesqmlapplicationviewer
to load QML files with this comment on top:# This file was generated by the Qt Quick Application wizard of Qt Creator. # The code below adds the QmlApplicationViewer to the project and handles the # activation of QML debugging.
the desktop version uses
qtquickapplicationviewer
:# This file was generated by the Qt Quick 1 Application wizard of Qt Creator. # The code below adds the QtQuick1ApplicationViewer to the project.
I'm not sure if the applicationviewer or the qt version difference causes my problem.
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@Chillax
qtquickapplicationviewer
was a helper class added back then which calls other in-built functions to load QML files. It also provided some extra functions for ease. You can also directly useQQuickView
orQQmlApplicationEngine
to load the QML files depending upon the root object. This is all Qt 5.x related.
Similarlyqmlapplicationviewer
is an helper class. If you look into its source you can see it is actually subclassed fromQDeclarativeView
which actually loads and displays the QML files.I'm not sure if the applicationviewer or the qt version difference causes my problem.
AFAIK definitely not
applicationviewer
but may be Qt version.Also did you try running same application with Qt 4.8 on desktop ? I think you should try that too to rule out the system problem if any.
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@p3c0 So I spent the last couple of hours trying to find out how to install Qt version 4.8 on Ubuntu, but it turns out that only the versions newer than 5.0 support linux. So I installed Qt Creator and Qt version 4.8 on Windows and it works there as well :)
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@p3c0 Interesting news: Until now, my
QmlApplicationViewer flowView
was just a new window on top of the GUI I was using until now. But if I show onlyflowView
in fullscreen and nothing else, it works (updates/repaints).qmlRegisterType<FlowGrafik>("FlowGrafik",1,0,"FlowGrafik"); QmlApplicationViewer flowView; flowView.setSource(QUrl("qrc:///qml/qml/FlowView.qml")); flowView.showFullScreen();
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@p3c0 What's more interesting: If I call
addFlow
from QML, it works (replots). But if I call it from C++, it updates theQWidget
, but not the QML Item. Even if I callrefresh()
from QML right after it, which should replot and repaint the QML Item too. Any explanation to this? Why is there a difference between changing the QWidget in the C++ code and asking for a replot from QML and doing everything in QML? As if the QML Item and the C++ QDeclarativeItem were two independent objects.So now my plan is to give the flow value from C++ to the
FlowGrafik
QML item, and then calladdFlow
from QML. That should work. -
@Chillax Unfortunately I too dont understand this behavior. The fact that it works in desktop environment and not on embedded only points that there should be some bug in that environment.
So now my plan is to give the flow value from C++ to the FlowGrafik QML item, and then call addFlow from QML.
Try. I had suggested the same earlier :)
Let us know if it works or if possible the exact reason so that it may help others too. -
@p3c0 So thanks a lot for the help! I would have given up without you :) The problem was that I created two instances of
FlowGrafik
. One in the QML and one in C++. I changed the C++ one and expected the QML one to refresh.Now I created a pointer in the C++ code that points to the Item in the QML.
QmlApplicationViewer flowView; flowView.setSource(QUrl("qrc:///qml/qml/FlowView.qml")); QObject * flowViewObject = flowView.rootObject(); FlowGrafik * flowGrafik = flowViewObject->findChild<FlowGrafik *>(QString("FlowGrafik"));
But now if I want to use this pointer (like
flowGrafik->addFlow(...)
) I get a segmentation fault. Do you know why? -
@Chillax Thank you :)
The problem was that I created two instances of FlowGrafik. One in the QML and one in C++. I changed the C++ one and expected the QML one to refresh.
but now this makes me wonder as to why it worked on desktop.
But now if I want to use this pointer (like flowGrafik->addFlow(...)) I get a segmentation fault. Do you know why?
Was the
FlowGrafik
object found ? You can add a small condition to verify it.if(flowGrafik) { flowGrafik->addFlow(...) }