6

So I have a signal:

QML:

signal qmlSendWorkflowIdsArraySignal(variant workflowIdsArray)

JS:

sendToCppWorkflowIdsArray(arrayOfWorkflowIds);

C++:

QObject::connect(qmlMainContentItemObject, SIGNAL(qmlSendWorkflowIdsArraySignal(QVariant)), &myController, SLOT(qmlToCppWorkflowIdsArraySlot(QVariant)));

C++ slot:

void qmlToCppWorkflowIdsArraySlot(QVariant workflowIdsArray)
{
  qDebug() << " +++++++++++++++ Cpp Array slot has been called: "<<workflowIdsArray;
}

Output:

+++++++++++++++ Cpp Array slot has been called:
QVariant(QVariantList, (QVariant(QString, "2") ,  QVariant(QString, "3") ,  QVariant(QString, "4") ) )
  • How do I read this QVariantList inside QVariant, ie, lets say I want to read this first element of the array, that is QVariant(QString, “2”), then the other and the other. This looks very complicated like this.
  • All I need is to pass an array of integers from QML to C++, so I can read this array. I dont want to use QVariant or a QVariantList, unless I have to as I see no other way to do it.

Does anyone have any suggestions?

2 Answers 2

6

QML supports conversion between QList and Javascript values, for a limited amount of types. See the documentation on type conversion for details. No need to use QVariant for these.

With that, calling C++ methods from JS is easy:

tester.h:

class Tester : public QObject
{
    Q_OBJECT
public:
    Q_INVOKABLE void bla(const QList<QString> &strings) {
        qDebug() << "Tester::bla():" << strings;
    }
};

main.cpp:

Tester tester;
viewer.engine()->rootContext()->setContextProperty("_tester", &tester);

QML:

onClicked: _tester.bla(["asdf", "foo", "bar"]);

Note that I didn't use a signal here - in your case, the signal was connected from the C++ code, where the C++ code accessed an object from the QML layer. I try to avoid that, to force a cleaner separation between the C++ and QML layers, which makes it possible to completely change the QML code without needing to adapt the C++ layer. The C++ layer should never reach into the QML layer, the other way around is fine though.

3
  • In tester.cpp I want to implement a big lets say bla() method, what is the syntax for that? Is it: void tester::bla(const QList<QString> &strings) { ........} ?
    – mshefiti
    Dec 17, 2014 at 17:53
  • Do I understand you correctly that you want to move the implementation of bla() from in-class in the .h file to out-of-class in the .cpp file? That would indeed be void Tester::bla(const QList<QString> &strings) { ... } in the .cpp file. Dec 17, 2014 at 22:38
  • IMPORTANT NOTE: I can't achieve the result without const keyword. Apr 8, 2023 at 11:09
3

One way to pass an array from QML to C++ is as follows:

Create a class which is going to receive that integer array:

DataReceiver.h

#include <QQuickItem>
#include <QList>

class Receiver : public QQuickItem
{
private:
    Q_OBJECT

    Q_PROPERTY (QList<int> xx READ xx WRITE setXX NOTIFY xxChanged)
    QList<int> m_xx;

public:
    Receiver (QQuickItem *parent = 0) {}

    QList<int> xx() const
    {
        return m_xx;
    }

public slots:
    void setXX (QList<int> arg)
    {
        if (m_xx != arg) {
            m_xx = arg;
            emit xxChanged (arg);
        }
    }

signals:
    void xxChanged (QList<int> arg);
};

In main.cpp

#include <QGuiApplication>
#include <QQmlApplicationEngine>
#include "DataReceiver.h"

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

    const char* ui = "HELLO"; // @uri HELLO
    qmlRegisterType <Receiver> (ui, 1, 0, "DataReceiver");

    QQmlApplicationEngine engine;
    engine.load(QUrl(QStringLiteral("qrc:///main.qml")));

    return app.exec();
}

In QML (main.qml)

import QtQuick 2.2
import QtQuick.Window 2.1
import HELLO 1.0

Window 
{
    visible: true
    width: 360
    height: 360

    id: head

    property variant myArray: [1,2,3]

    DataReceiver
    {
         id: dataReceiver
         xx: head.myArray
    } 
}

You might also like to check this:
How to push values to QML property variant two dimensional array - dynamically?

5
  • 1
    Yep, using properties is even better than Q_INVOKABLE methods, as property bindings are more declarative than imperatively calling some method. Dec 16, 2014 at 8:00
  • Just to be clear on what to use,I will ask you one more question: I also have a QML with lots of buttons and other controls. Once a button is clicked I want to send to C++, the objectName of the button that I clicked in QML. Then C++ should call a method, which checks the objectName of the buttonClicked and then does something. You have described very nicely up there how to send an array from QML to C++.I was wondering if there is something similar for sending the objectName onButtonClicked. Right now I am using signals and slots for everything. It works good,but its my thesis,I want the best.
    – mshefiti
    Dec 17, 2014 at 18:16
  • @mshefiti There is no need to send any object name anywhere. You can simply declare an unique ID for each button and send that ID wherever you want. Dec 18, 2014 at 6:27
  • 1
    thank you for your answer, its quite helpful @TheIndependentAquarius
    – mshefiti
    Dec 26, 2014 at 17:26
  • 1
    thank you @tmcguire, I also tried Q_Invokable which works perfectly fine, but in my case it makes more sense to use property bindings.
    – mshefiti
    Dec 26, 2014 at 17:28

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.