Following example from this link: http://developer.kde.org/documentation/books/kde-2.0-development/ch03lev1sec3.html

#include <QObject>
#include <QPushButton>
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

class MyWindow : public QWidget
{
    Q_OBJECT  // Enable slots and signals
    public:
        MyWindow();
    private slots:
        void slotButton1();
        void slotButton2();
        void slotButtons();
    private:
        QPushButton *button1;
        QPushButton *button2;
};

MyWindow :: MyWindow() : QWidget()
{
    // Create button1 and connect button1->clicked() to this->slotButton1()
    button1 = new QPushButton("Button1", this);
    button1->setGeometry(10,10,100,40);
    button1->show();
    connect(button1, SIGNAL(clicked()), this, SLOT(slotButton1()));

    // Create button2 and connect button2->clicked() to this->slotButton2()
    button2 = new QPushButton("Button2", this);
    button2->setGeometry(110,10,100,40);
    button2->show();
    connect(button2, SIGNAL(clicked()), this, SLOT(slotButton2()));

    // When any button is clicked, call this->slotButtons()
    connect(button1, SIGNAL(clicked()), this, SLOT(slotButtons()));
    connect(button2, SIGNAL(clicked()), this, SLOT(slotButtons()));
}

// This slot is called when button1 is clicked.
void MyWindow::slotButton1()
{
    cout << "Button1 was clicked" << endl;
}

// This slot is called when button2 is clicked
void MyWindow::slotButton2()
{
    cout << "Button2 was clicked" << endl;
}

// This slot is called when any of the buttons were clicked
void MyWindow::slotButtons()
{
    cout << "A button was clicked" << endl;
}

int main ()
{
    MyWindow a;
}

results in:

    [13:14:34 Mon May 02] ~/junkPrograms/src/nonsense  $make
g++ -c -m64 -pipe -O2 -Wall -W -D_REENTRANT -DQT_NO_DEBUG -DQT_GUI_LIB -DQT_CORE_LIB -DQT_SHARED -I/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/mkspecs/linux-g++-64 -I. -I/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/include/QtCore -I/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/include/QtGui -I/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/include -I. -I. -o signalsSlots.o signalsSlots.cpp
g++ -m64 -Wl,-O1 -Wl,-rpath,/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/lib -o nonsense signalsSlots.o    -L/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/lib -lQtGui -L/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/lib -L/usr/X11R6/lib64 -lQtCore -lpthread
signalsSlots.o: In function `MyWindow::MyWindow()':
signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x1a2): undefined reference to `vtable for MyWindow'
signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x1aa): undefined reference to `vtable for MyWindow'
signalsSlots.o: In function `MyWindow::MyWindow()':
signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x3e2): undefined reference to `vtable for MyWindow'
signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x3ea): undefined reference to `vtable for MyWindow'
signalsSlots.o: In function `main':
signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x614): undefined reference to `vtable for MyWindow'
signalsSlots.o:signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x61d): more undefined references to `vtable for MyWindow' follow
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
make: *** [nonsense] Error 1

vtable is for virtual functions, AFAIK, what's the reason of error here?

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77% accept rate
I don't see what is the problem, but I would like to point out that the tutorial you are using is rather outdated. I suggest you look at the tutorials in Qt 4.7 documentation. – ypnos May 2 '11 at 8:11
@ypnos thanks but the tut on 4.7 doesn't show any "running" example, which I could just paste and run :( – Anisha Kaul May 2 '11 at 8:28
feedback

2 Answers

up vote 4 down vote accepted

It looks like moc doesn't generate code for your QObject because you declare it in the .cpp file. The easiest way to fix that is to move the declaration of MyWindow to a header, and add the header to the HEADERS list, in the .pro file:

HEADERS += yourheader.h 

Then rerun qmake.

(Please note that the KDE 2.0 book you look at is vastly outdated)

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Thanks for responding, but is there no way by which I can keep the declaration and the definition in the .cpp file? – Anisha Kaul May 2 '11 at 8:16
Try with HEADERS += your.cpp . Generally, although possible, I find QObject declarations so much pain that I prefer to have them (private) headers instead. Which works fine with all buildsystems, be it qmake, cmake, ... – Frank Osterfeld May 2 '11 at 8:21
Thanks again, I seperated the .h, .cpp and main :mad: and it solved the error, I haven't yet studied details regarding moc file. – Anisha Kaul May 2 '11 at 8:27
3  
Whenever you declare a QObject inside a filename.cpp file, you should add #include "filename.moc" to the end of your .cpp file and qmake will do the right thing for you. This is the common practice in KDE, for example. – andref May 2 '11 at 14:24
feedback

Just Change your Main() as follows:

#include <QtGui/QApplication>

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    QApplication a(argc, argv);
    MyWindow w;

    w.show();

    return a.exec();
}
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Thanks, I did this, but it didn't help :( – Anisha Kaul May 2 '11 at 8:18
I was wrong, this did help, window wouldn't be created without that code! Thanks. – Anisha Kaul May 2 '11 at 8:25
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