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I have a QThread which does a lot of calculations (it can run for minutes), and at one (and only one) point it requires user input, for example in the form of a yes/no dialog. Of course, no GUI elements can be accessed and no dialogs opened from the thread (a Qt design choice), as it is not the main thread.

Well there are many obvious solutions, but I'm interested in a "recommended" solution, or a "best practice".

My ideas:

  1. as there is only one point where input must be read from the GUI, I can have two threads, the second thread being started after the dialog is evaluated. Problem: it makes the code inflexible, what if I have to introduce more dialogs later? Unlikely, but might happen.
  2. I have only one thread, and I communicate with signals and slots in both directions (I only have experience with signals in the form of "thread to main", not in the reverse direction). So the thread runs, comes to the point where the user decision must be made, so the thread emits a signal to the main (aka the GUI thread), the main catches it in a slot, creates the dialog, evaluates the result, and emits a signal to the thread. What now? The thread catches the signal in a slot, but how should it affect the run() method where the calculations are being done? If the run() exits, the thread dies. So I have something like this in my run() function: while (!can_continue) { sleep(); } and I set can_continue in the slot where I caught the signal sent form the main. However, I have some doubts about this being the most simple / most elegant solution. Is there a general practice I should know about?

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Your problems with second version arises because you are working with Qt thread wrong.

You should create new object class Worker: public QObject that has signals:

void stage1Finished();
void stage2Fibished();

and slots:

void startStage1();
void startStage2();

then create Qthread thread object, push Worker to the thread, connect startStage1() with started() signal of thread, show dialog on signal stage1Finished() and connect dialog-accepted-signal with startStage2(). Connect stage2Finished with exit() slot of thread.

Then you will not have to sleep anywhere, all signals processing will go through standard mechanism in Qthread. Then you just start the thread to start processing and get finished signal on processing finished.

While connecting signals to slots, use Qt::QueuedConnection.

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  • Could you please specify it a bit more? What is Worker derived from, a QThread? Do I understand it correctly, and is it used instead of my original worker thread and not besides it? And what should there be in its run() method, to not close the thread once run() is finished. I assume I should not override run() at all, so the thread will not exit unless exit() is specifically called. Not only for me to be sure I understood it correctly, but it might be useful for further readers as well.
    – vsz
    Jul 28, 2012 at 14:42
  • @vsz, Read given link, please. It explains idea in details. In short, you have "original" QThread object and you have Worker object, move worker object to the given thread and after that all worker slots, executed through signals/slots connection executed in context of given thread.
    – Lol4t0
    Jul 28, 2012 at 14:48
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    Your link is now expired, but seems like the domain has updated to this link: blog.qt.io/blog/2010/06/17/youre-doing-it-wrong
    – Endyd
    Mar 26, 2019 at 16:03

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