Qt No Such Slot In Derived Class

@mrjj QObject::metaObject returns the QMetaObject associated with the class (it's a static member, and the method provides virtualization over the class tree). If you don't have the QOBJECT macro, there's no staticMetaObject member for the class, and consequently there's no metaObject override, thus you get the parent's staticMetaObject (or the last class that had the macro). Connect(ui-pbMenu, SIGNAL(clicked), this, SLOT(master-changeForm(menu))); I'm doing it like this as I have several forms that I need to change between, and I don't to redefine the slot in every class/form when I could use a slot in the master class to handle it all, and simply call that every time I need to change forms.

The QSqlDriver class is an abstract base class for accessing specific SQL databases. More...

Public Types

enum DriverFeature { Transactions, QuerySize, BLOB, Unicode, ..., MultipleResultSets }
enum IdentifierType { FieldName, TableName }
enum StatementType { WhereStatement, SelectStatement, UpdateStatement, InsertStatement, DeleteStatement }

Public Functions

QSqlDriver(QObject * parent = 0)
~QSqlDriver()
virtual bool beginTransaction()
virtual void close() = 0
virtual bool commitTransaction()
virtual QSqlResult * createResult() const = 0
virtual QString escapeIdentifier(const QString & identifier, IdentifierType type) const
virtual QString formatValue(const QSqlField & field, bool trimStrings = false) const
virtual QVariant handle() const
virtual bool hasFeature(DriverFeature feature) const = 0
bool isIdentifierEscaped(const QString & identifier, IdentifierType type) const
virtual bool isOpen() const
bool isOpenError() const
QSqlError lastError() const
QSql::NumericalPrecisionPolicy numericalPrecisionPolicy() const
virtual bool open(const QString & db, const QString & user = QString(), const QString & password = QString(), const QString & host = QString(), int port = -1, const QString & options = QString()) = 0
virtual QSqlIndex primaryIndex(const QString & tableName) const
virtual QSqlRecord record(const QString & tableName) const
virtual bool rollbackTransaction()
void setNumericalPrecisionPolicy(QSql::NumericalPrecisionPolicy precisionPolicy)
virtual QString sqlStatement(StatementType type, const QString & tableName, const QSqlRecord & rec, bool preparedStatement) const
QString stripDelimiters(const QString & identifier, IdentifierType type) const
bool subscribeToNotification(const QString & name)
QStringList subscribedToNotifications() const
virtual QStringList tables(QSql::TableType tableType) const
bool unsubscribeFromNotification(const QString & name)
  • 29 public functions inherited from QObject

Signals

  • 1 signal inherited from QObject

Protected Functions

virtual void setLastError(const QSqlError & error)
virtual void setOpen(bool open)
virtual void setOpenError(bool error)
  • 8 protected functions inherited from QObject

Protected Slots

bool isIdentifierEscapedImplementation(const QString & identifier, IdentifierType type) const
QString stripDelimitersImplementation(const QString & identifier, IdentifierType type) const
bool subscribeToNotificationImplementation(const QString & name)
QStringList subscribedToNotificationsImplementation() const
bool unsubscribeFromNotificationImplementation(const QString & name)

Additional Inherited Members

  • 1 property inherited from QObject
  • 1 public slot inherited from QObject
  • 7 static public members inherited from QObject

Detailed Description

The QSqlDriver class is an abstract base class for accessing specific SQL databases.

This class should not be used directly. Use QSqlDatabase instead.

If you want to create your own SQL drivers, you can subclass this class and reimplement its pure virtual functions and those virtual functions that you need. See How to Write Your Own Database Driver for more information.

See also QSqlDatabase and QSqlResult.

Member Type Documentation

enum QSqlDriver::DriverFeature

This enum contains a list of features a driver might support. Use hasFeature() to query whether a feature is supported or not.

ConstantValueDescription
QSqlDriver::Transactions0Whether the driver supports SQL transactions.
QSqlDriver::QuerySize1Whether the database is capable of reporting the size of a query. Note that some databases do not support returning the size (i.e. number of rows returned) of a query, in which case QSqlQuery::size() will return -1.
QSqlDriver::BLOB2Whether the driver supports Binary Large Object fields.
QSqlDriver::Unicode3Whether the driver supports Unicode strings if the database server does.
QSqlDriver::PreparedQueries4Whether the driver supports prepared query execution.
QSqlDriver::NamedPlaceholders5Whether the driver supports the use of named placeholders.
QSqlDriver::PositionalPlaceholders6Whether the driver supports the use of positional placeholders.
QSqlDriver::LastInsertId7Whether the driver supports returning the Id of the last touched row.
QSqlDriver::BatchOperations8Whether the driver supports batched operations, see QSqlQuery::execBatch()
QSqlDriver::SimpleLocking9Whether the driver disallows a write lock on a table while other queries have a read lock on it.
QSqlDriver::LowPrecisionNumbers10Whether the driver allows fetching numerical values with low precision.
QSqlDriver::EventNotifications11Whether the driver supports database event notifications.
QSqlDriver::FinishQuery12Whether the driver can do any low-level resource cleanup when QSqlQuery::finish() is called.
QSqlDriver::MultipleResultSets13Whether the driver can access multiple result sets returned from batched statements or stored procedures.

More information about supported features can be found in the Qt SQL driver documentation.

See also hasFeature().

enum QSqlDriver::IdentifierType

This enum contains a list of SQL identifier types.

ConstantValueDescription
QSqlDriver::FieldName0A SQL field name
QSqlDriver::TableName1A SQL table name

enum QSqlDriver::StatementType

This enum contains a list of SQL statement (or clause) types the driver can create.

ConstantValueDescription
QSqlDriver::WhereStatement0An SQL WHERE statement (e.g., WHERE f = 5).
QSqlDriver::SelectStatement1An SQL SELECT statement (e.g., SELECT f FROM t).
QSqlDriver::UpdateStatement2An SQL UPDATE statement (e.g., UPDATE TABLE t set f = 1).
QSqlDriver::InsertStatement3An SQL INSERT statement (e.g., INSERT INTO t (f) values (1)).
QSqlDriver::DeleteStatement4An SQL DELETE statement (e.g., DELETE FROM t).

See also sqlStatement().

Member Function Documentation

QSqlDriver::QSqlDriver(QObject * parent = 0)

Constructs a new driver with the given parent.

QSqlDriver::~QSqlDriver()

Destroys the object and frees any allocated resources.

[virtual] bool QSqlDriver::beginTransaction()

This function is called to begin a transaction. If successful, return true, otherwise return false. The default implementation does nothing and returns false.

See also commitTransaction() and rollbackTransaction().

[pure virtual] void QSqlDriver::close()

Derived classes must reimplement this pure virtual function in order to close the database connection. Return true on success, false on failure.

See also open() and setOpen().

[virtual] bool QSqlDriver::commitTransaction()

This function is called to commit a transaction. If successful, return true, otherwise return false. The default implementation does nothing and returns false.

See also beginTransaction() and rollbackTransaction().

[pure virtual] QSqlResult * QSqlDriver::createResult() const

Creates an empty SQL result on the database. Derived classes must reimplement this function and return a QSqlResult object appropriate for their database to the caller.

[virtual] QString QSqlDriver::escapeIdentifier(const QString & identifier, IdentifierType type) const

Returns the identifier escaped according to the database rules. identifier can either be a table name or field name, dependent on type.

The default implementation does nothing.

See also isIdentifierEscaped().

[virtual] QString QSqlDriver::formatValue(const QSqlField & field, bool trimStrings = false) const

Returns a string representation of the field value for the database. This is used, for example, when constructing INSERT and UPDATE statements.

The default implementation returns the value formatted as a string according to the following rules:

  • If field is character data, the value is returned enclosed in single quotation marks, which is appropriate for many SQL databases. Any embedded single-quote characters are escaped (replaced with two single-quote characters). If trimStrings is true (the default is false), all trailing whitespace is trimmed from the field.
  • If field is date/time data, the value is formatted in ISO format and enclosed in single quotation marks. If the date/time data is invalid, 'NULL' is returned.
  • If field is bytearray data, and the driver can edit binary fields, the value is formatted as a hexadecimal string.
  • For any other field type, toString() is called on its value and the result of this is returned.

See also QVariant::toString().

[virtual] QVariant QSqlDriver::handle() const

Returns the low-level database handle wrapped in a QVariant or an invalid variant if there is no handle.

Warning: Use this with uttermost care and only if you know what you're doing.

Warning: The handle returned here can become a stale pointer if the connection is modified (for example, if you close the connection).

Warning: The handle can be NULL if the connection is not open yet.

The handle returned here is database-dependent, you should query the type name of the variant before accessing it.

This example retrieves the handle for a connection to sqlite:

This snippet returns the handle for PostgreSQL or MySQL:

See also QSqlResult::handle().

[pure virtual] bool QSqlDriver::hasFeature(DriverFeature feature) const

Returns true if the driver supports feature feature; otherwise returns false.

Note that some databases need to be open() before this can be determined.

See also DriverFeature.

bool QSqlDriver::isIdentifierEscaped(const QString & identifier, IdentifierType type) const

Returns whether identifier is escaped according to the database rules. identifier can either be a table name or field name, dependent on type.

Warning: Because of binary compatibility constraints, this function is not virtual. If you want to provide your own implementation in your QSqlDriver subclass, reimplement the isIdentifierEscapedImplementation() slot in your subclass instead. The isIdentifierEscapedFunction() will dynamically detect the slot and call it.

See also stripDelimiters() and escapeIdentifier().

[protected slot] bool QSqlDriver::isIdentifierEscapedImplementation(const QString & identifier, IdentifierType type) const

This slot returns whether identifier is escaped according to the database rules. identifier can either be a table name or field name, dependent on type.

Because of binary compatibility constraints, isIdentifierEscaped() function (introduced in Qt 4.5) is not virtual. Instead, isIdentifierEscaped() will dynamically detect and call this slot. The default implementation assumes the escape/delimiter character is a double quote. Reimplement this slot in your own QSqlDriver if your database engine uses a different delimiter character.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.6.

See also isIdentifierEscaped().

[virtual] bool QSqlDriver::isOpen() const

Returns true if the database connection is open; otherwise returns false.

bool QSqlDriver::isOpenError() const

Returns true if the there was an error opening the database connection; otherwise returns false.

QSqlError QSqlDriver::lastError() const

Returns a QSqlError object which contains information about the last error that occurred on the database.

See also setLastError().

[signal] void QSqlDriver::notification(const QString & name)

This signal is emitted when the database posts an event notification that the driver subscribes to. name identifies the event notification.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.4.

See also subscribeToNotification().

QSql::NumericalPrecisionPolicy QSqlDriver::numericalPrecisionPolicy() const

Returns the current default precision policy for the database connection.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.6.

See also QSql::NumericalPrecisionPolicy, setNumericalPrecisionPolicy(), QSqlQuery::numericalPrecisionPolicy(), and QSqlQuery::setNumericalPrecisionPolicy().

[pure virtual] bool QSqlDriver::open(const QString & db, const QString & user = QString(), const QString & password = QString(), const QString & host = QString(), int port = -1, const QString & options = QString())

Derived classes must reimplement this pure virtual function to open a database connection on database db, using user name user, password password, host host, port port and connection options options.

The function must return true on success and false on failure.

See also setOpen().

[virtual] QSqlIndex QSqlDriver::primaryIndex(const QString & tableName) const

Returns the primary index for table tableName. Returns an empty QSqlIndex if the table doesn't have a primary index. The default implementation returns an empty index.

[virtual] QSqlRecord QSqlDriver::record(const QString & tableName) const

Returns a QSqlRecord populated with the names of the fields in table tableName. If no such table exists, an empty record is returned. The default implementation returns an empty record.

[virtual] bool QSqlDriver::rollbackTransaction()

This function is called to rollback a transaction. If successful, return true, otherwise return false. The default implementation does nothing and returns false.

See also beginTransaction() and commitTransaction().

[virtual protected] void QSqlDriver::setLastError(const QSqlError & error)

This function is used to set the value of the last error, error, that occurred on the database.

See also lastError().

void QSqlDriver::setNumericalPrecisionPolicy(QSql::NumericalPrecisionPolicy precisionPolicy)

Sets the default numerical precision policy used by queries created by this driver to precisionPolicy.

Note: Setting the default precision policy to precisionPolicy doesn't affect any currently active queries.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.6.

See also QSql::NumericalPrecisionPolicy, numericalPrecisionPolicy(), QSqlQuery::setNumericalPrecisionPolicy(), and QSqlQuery::numericalPrecisionPolicy().

[virtual protected] void QSqlDriver::setOpen(bool open)

This function sets the open state of the database to open. Derived classes can use this function to report the status of open().

See also open() and setOpenError().

[virtual protected] void QSqlDriver::setOpenError(bool error)

This function sets the open error state of the database to error. Derived classes can use this function to report the status of open(). Note that if error is true the open state of the database is set to closed (i.e., isOpen() returns false).

See also isOpenError(), open(), and setOpen().

[virtual] QString QSqlDriver::sqlStatement(StatementType type, const QString & tableName, const QSqlRecord & rec, bool preparedStatement) const

Returns a SQL statement of type type for the table tableName with the values from rec. If preparedStatement is true, the string will contain placeholders instead of values.

This method can be used to manipulate tables without having to worry about database-dependent SQL dialects. For non-prepared statements, the values will be properly escaped.

QString QSqlDriver::stripDelimiters(const QString & identifier, IdentifierType type) const

Returns the identifier with the leading and trailing delimiters removed, identifier can either be a table name or field name, dependent on type. If identifier does not have leading and trailing delimiter characters, identifier is returned without modification.

Warning: Because of binary compatibility constraints, this function is not virtual, If you want to provide your own implementation in your QSqlDriver subclass, reimplement the stripDelimitersImplementation() slot in your subclass instead. The stripDelimiters() function will dynamically detect the slot and call it.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.5.

See also isIdentifierEscaped().

[protected slot] QString QSqlDriver::stripDelimitersImplementation(const QString & identifier, IdentifierType type) const

This slot returns identifier with the leading and trailing delimiters removed, identifier can either be a tablename or field name, dependent on type. If identifier does not have leading and trailing delimiter characters, identifier is returned without modification.

Because of binary compatibility constraints, the stripDelimiters() function (introduced in Qt 4.5) is not virtual. Instead, stripDelimiters() will dynamically detect and call this slot. It generally unnecessary to reimplement this slot.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.6.

See also stripDelimiters().

bool QSqlDriver::subscribeToNotification(const QString & name)

This function is called to subscribe to event notifications from the database. name identifies the event notification.

If successful, return true, otherwise return false.

The database must be open when this function is called. When the database is closed by calling close() all subscribed event notifications are automatically unsubscribed. Note that calling open() on an already open database may implicitly cause close() to be called, which will cause the driver to unsubscribe from all event notifications.

When an event notification identified by name is posted by the database the notification() signal is emitted.

Warning: Because of binary compatibility constraints, this function is not virtual. If you want to provide event notification support in your own QSqlDriver subclass, reimplement the subscribeToNotificationImplementation() slot in your subclass instead. The subscribeToNotification() function will dynamically detect the slot and call it.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.4.

See also unsubscribeFromNotification(), subscribedToNotifications(), and QSqlDriver::hasFeature().

[protected slot] bool QSqlDriver::subscribeToNotificationImplementation(const QString & name)

This slot is called to subscribe to event notifications from the database. name identifies the event notification.

If successful, return true, otherwise return false.

The database must be open when this slot is called. When the database is closed by calling close() all subscribed event notifications are automatically unsubscribed. Note that calling open() on an already open database may implicitly cause close() to be called, which will cause the driver to unsubscribe from all event notifications.

When an event notification identified by name is posted by the database the notification() signal is emitted.

Reimplement this slot to provide your own QSqlDriver subclass with event notification support; because of binary compatibility constraints, the subscribeToNotification() function (introduced in Qt 4.4) is not virtual. Instead, subscribeToNotification() will dynamically detect and call this slot. The default implementation does nothing and returns false.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.4.

See also subscribeToNotification().

QStringList QSqlDriver::subscribedToNotifications() const

Returns a list of the names of the event notifications that are currently subscribed to.

Warning: Because of binary compatibility constraints, this function is not virtual. If you want to provide event notification support in your own QSqlDriver subclass, reimplement the subscribedToNotificationsImplementation() slot in your subclass instead. The subscribedToNotifications() function will dynamically detect the slot and call it.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.4.

See also subscribeToNotification() and unsubscribeFromNotification().

[protected slot] QStringList QSqlDriver::subscribedToNotificationsImplementation() const

Returns a list of the names of the event notifications that are currently subscribed to.

Reimplement this slot to provide your own QSqlDriver subclass with event notification support; because of binary compatibility constraints, the subscribedToNotifications() function (introduced in Qt 4.4) is not virtual. Instead, subscribedToNotifications() will dynamically detect and call this slot. The default implementation simply returns an empty QStringList.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.4.

See also subscribedToNotifications().

[virtual] QStringList QSqlDriver::tables(QSql::TableType tableType) const

Returns a list of the names of the tables in the database. The default implementation returns an empty list.

The tableType argument describes what types of tables should be returned. Due to binary compatibility, the string contains the value of the enum QSql::TableTypes as text. An empty string should be treated as QSql::Tables for backward compatibility.

Qt No Such Slot In Derived Class

bool QSqlDriver::unsubscribeFromNotification(const QString & name)

This function is called to unsubscribe from event notifications from the database. name identifies the event notification.

If successful, return true, otherwise return false.

The database must be open when this function is called. All subscribed event notifications are automatically unsubscribed from when the close() function is called.

After calling this function the notification() signal will no longer be emitted when an event notification identified by name is posted by the database.

Warning: Because of binary compatibility constraints, this function is not virtual. If you want to provide event notification support in your own QSqlDriver subclass, reimplement the unsubscribeFromNotificationImplementation() slot in your subclass instead. The unsubscribeFromNotification() function will dynamically detect the slot and call it.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.4.

See also subscribeToNotification() and subscribedToNotifications().

[protected slot] bool QSqlDriver::unsubscribeFromNotificationImplementation(const QString & name)

This slot is called to unsubscribe from event notifications from the database. name identifies the event notification.

If successful, return true, otherwise return false.

The database must be open when this slot is called. All subscribed event notifications are automatically unsubscribed from when the close() function is called.

After calling this slot the notification() signal will no longer be emitted when an event notification identified by name is posted by the database.

Reimplement this slot to provide your own QSqlDriver subclass with event notification support; because of binary compatibility constraints, the unsubscribeFromNotification() function (introduced in Qt 4.4) is not virtual. Instead, unsubscribeFromNotification() will dynamically detect and call this slot. The default implementation does nothing and returns false.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.4.

See also unsubscribeFromNotification().

© 2016 The Qt Company Ltd. Documentation contributions included herein are the copyrights of their respective owners. The documentation provided herein is licensed under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software Foundation. Qt and respective logos are trademarks of The Qt Company Ltd. in Finland and/or other countries worldwide. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.

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The QObject class is the base class of all Qt objects. More...

Inherited by AbstractAudioOutput, Notifier, Effect, MediaController, MediaObject, QAbstractAnimation, QAbstractEventDispatcher, QAbstractItemDelegate, QAbstractItemModel, QAbstractMessageHandler, QAbstractNetworkCache, QAbstractState, QAbstractTextDocumentLayout, QAbstractTransition, QAbstractUriResolver, QAbstractVideoSurface, QAction, QActionGroup, QAssistantClient, QAudioInput, QAudioOutput, QButtonGroup, QClipboard, QCompleter, QCoreApplication, QDataWidgetMapper, QDBusAbstractAdaptor, QDBusAbstractInterface, QDBusPendingCallWatcher, QDBusServiceWatcher, QDeclarativeComponent, QDeclarativeContext, QDeclarativeEngine, QDeclarativeExpression, QDeclarativeExtensionPlugin, QDeclarativePropertyMap, QDesignerFormEditorInterface, QDesignerFormWindowManagerInterface, QDrag, QEventLoop, QExtensionFactory, QExtensionManager, QFileSystemWatcher, QFtp, QGesture, QGLShader, QGLShaderProgram, QGraphicsAnchor, QGraphicsEffect, QGraphicsItemAnimation, QGraphicsObject, QGraphicsScene, QGraphicsTransform, QHelpEngineCore, QHelpSearchEngine, QHttp, QHttpMultiPart, QInputContext, QIODevice, QItemSelectionModel, QLayout, QLibrary, QLocalServer, QMimeData, QMovie, QNetworkAccessManager, QNetworkConfigurationManager, QNetworkCookieJar, QNetworkSession, QObjectCleanupHandler, QPluginLoader, QPyDeclarativePropertyValueSource, QPyDesignerContainerExtension, QPyDesignerCustomWidgetCollectionPlugin, QPyDesignerCustomWidgetPlugin, QPyDesignerMemberSheetExtension, QPyDesignerPropertySheetExtension, QPyDesignerTaskMenuExtension, QPyTextObject, QScriptEngine, QScriptEngineDebugger, QSessionManager, QSettings, QSharedMemory, QShortcut, QSignalMapper, QSocketNotifier, QSound, QSqlDriver, QStyle, QSvgRenderer, QSyntaxHighlighter, QSystemTrayIcon, QTcpServer, QTextDocument, QTextObject, QThread, QThreadPool, QTimeLine, QTimer, QTranslator, QUndoGroup, QUndoStack, QValidator, QWebFrame, QWebHistoryInterface, QWebPage, QWebPluginFactory and QWidget.

Methods

  • bool blockSignals (self, bool b)
  • list-of-QObject children (self)
  • bool connect (self, QObject, SIGNAL(), SLOT(), Qt.ConnectionType = Qt.AutoConnection)
  • customEvent (self, QEvent)
  • disconnectNotify (self, SIGNAL() signal)
  • dumpObjectTree (self)
  • emit (self, SIGNAL(), ...)
  • bool eventFilter (self, QObject, QEvent)
  • QObject findChild (self, type type, QString name = QString())
  • QObject findChild (self, tuple types, QString name = QString())
  • list-of-QObject findChildren (self, type type, QString name = QString())
  • list-of-QObject findChildren (self, tuple types, QString name = QString())
  • list-of-QObject findChildren (self, type type, QRegExp regExp)
  • list-of-QObject findChildren (self, tuple types, QRegExp regExp)
  • installEventFilter (self, QObject)
  • killTimer (self, int id)
  • moveToThread (self, QThread thread)
  • QObject parent (self)
  • pyqtConfigure (self, object)
  • removeEventFilter (self, QObject)
  • int senderSignalIndex (self)
  • setParent (self, QObject)
  • bool signalsBlocked (self)
  • QThread thread (self)
  • QString tr (self, str sourceText, str disambiguation = None, int n = -1)
  • QString trUtf8 (self, str sourceText, str disambiguation = None, int n = -1)

Static Methods

  • bool connect (QObject, SIGNAL(), QObject, SLOT(), Qt.ConnectionType = Qt.AutoConnection)
  • bool connect (QObject, SIGNAL(), callable, Qt.ConnectionType = Qt.AutoConnection)
  • bool disconnect (QObject, SIGNAL(), QObject, SLOT())

Special Methods

  • object __getattr__ (self, str name)

Qt Signals

Static Members

  • QMetaObject staticMetaObject

Detailed Description

The QObject class is the base class of all Qt objects.

QObject is the heart of the Qt ObjectModel. The central feature in this model is a very powerfulmechanism for seamless object communication called signals and slots. Youcan connect a signal to a slot with connect() and destroy the connectionwith disconnect(). To avoidnever ending notification loops you can temporarily block signalswith blockSignals(). Theprotected functions connectNotify() and disconnectNotify() make itpossible to track connections.

QObjects organizethemselves in object trees. When youcreate a QObject with another object as parent, the object willautomatically add itself to the parent's children() list. The parent takesownership of the object; i.e., it will automatically delete itschildren in its destructor. You can look for an object by name andoptionally type using findChild() or findChildren().

Every object has an objectName() and its class namecan be found via the corresponding metaObject() (see QMetaObject.className()). You candetermine whether the object's class inherits another class in theQObject inheritance hierarchy by using the inherits() function.

When an object is deleted, it emits a destroyed() signal. You can catch thissignal to avoid dangling references to QObjects.

QObjects can receiveevents through event() and filterthe events of other objects. See installEventFilter() andeventFilter() for details. Aconvenience handler, childEvent(), can be reimplemented tocatch child events.

Last but not least, QObject provides the basic timer support inQt; see QTimer for high-level support fortimers.

Notice that the Q_OBJECTmacro is mandatory for any object that implements signals, slots orproperties. You also need to run the MetaObject Compiler on the source file. We strongly recommend theuse of this macro in all subclasses of QObject regardless ofwhether or not they actually use signals, slots and properties,since failure to do so may lead certain functions to exhibitstrange behavior.

All Qt widgets inherit QObject. The convenience functionisWidgetType() returnswhether an object is actually a widget. It is much faster thanqobject_cast<QWidget *>(obj) orobj->inherits('QWidget').

Some QObject functions, e.g. children(), return a QObjectList. QObjectList is a typedef forQList<QObject *>.

Thread Affinity

A QObject instance is said to have a thread affinity, orthat it lives in a certain thread. When a QObject receives aqueued signal or aposted event,the slot or event handler will run in the thread that the objectlives in.

Note: If a QObject has no thread affinity (that is, ifthread() returns zero), or if itlives in a thread that has no running event loop, then it cannotreceive queued signals or posted events.

By default, a QObject lives in the thread in which it iscreated. An object's thread affinity can be queried using thread() and changed using moveToThread().

All QObjects mustlive in the same thread as their parent. Consequently:

lisetParent() will fail if the twoQObjects involved livein different threads. li Whena QObject is moved to another thread, all its children will beautomatically moved too. limoveToThread() will fail ifthe QObject has a parent. liIf QObjects are created within QThread.run(), they cannot become childrenof the QThread object because theQThread does not live in the thread thatcalls QThread.run().

Note: A QObject's member variables do notautomatically become its children. The parent-child relationshipmust be set by either passing a pointer to the child's constructor, or by calling setParent(). Without this step, theobject's member variables will remain in the old thread whenmoveToThread() iscalled.

No copy constructor or assignment operator

QObject has neither a copy constructor nor an assignmentoperator. This is by design. Actually, they are declared, but in aprivate section with the macro Q_DISABLE_COPY(). In fact, all Qtclasses derived from QObject (direct or indirect) use this macro todeclare their copy constructor and assignment operator to beprivate. The reasoning is found in the discussion on Identity vs Value on the QtObject Model page.

The main consequence is that you should use pointers to QObject(or to your QObject subclass) where you might otherwise be temptedto use your QObject subclass as a value. For example, without acopy constructor, you can't use a subclass of QObject as the valueto be stored in one of the container classes. You must storepointers.

Auto-Connection

Qt's meta-object system provides a mechanism to automaticallyconnect signals and slots between QObject subclasses and theirchildren. As long as objects are defined with suitable objectnames, and slots follow a simple naming convention, this connectioncan be performed at run-time by the QMetaObject.connectSlotsByName()function.

uic generates code that invokes thisfunction to enable auto-connection to be performed between widgetson forms created with Qt Designer. More information aboutusing auto-connection with Qt Designer is given in theUsing a Designer UI File inYour Application section of the Qt Designer manual.

Dynamic Properties

From Qt 4.2, dynamic properties can be added to and removed fromQObject instances at run-time. Dynamic properties do not need to bedeclared at compile-time, yet they provide the same advantages asstatic properties and are manipulated using the same API - usingproperty() to read them andsetProperty() to writethem.

From Qt 4.3, dynamic properties are supported by Qt Designer,and both standard Qt widgets and user-created forms can be givendynamic properties.

Internationalization (i18n)

All QObject subclasses support Qt's translation features, makingit possible to translate an application's user interface intodifferent languages.

To make user-visible text translatable, it must be wrapped incalls to the tr() function. This isexplained in detail in the Writing Source Code forTranslation document.

Method Documentation

QObject.__init__ (self, QObjectparent = None)

The parent argument, if not None, causes self to be owned by Qt instead of PyQt.

Constructs an object with parent object parent.

The parent of an object may be viewed as the object's owner. Forinstance, a dialog box is the parent ofthe OK and Cancel buttons it contains.

The destructor of a parent object destroys all childobjects.

Setting parent to 0 constructs an object with no parent.If the object is a widget, it will become a top-level window.

See alsoparent(),findChild(), and findChildren().

bool QObject.blockSignals (self, bool b)

The return value is the previous value of signalsBlocked().

Note that the destroyed()signal will be emitted even if the signals for this object havebeen blocked.

See alsosignalsBlocked().

QObject.childEvent (self, QChildEvent)

This event handler can be reimplemented in a subclass to receivechild events. The event is passed in the eventparameter.

QEvent.ChildAdded andQEvent.ChildRemoved events aresent to objects when children are added or removed. In both casesyou can only rely on the child being a QObject, or if isWidgetType() returns true, aQWidget. (This is because, in theChildAdded case, the child isnot yet fully constructed, and in the ChildRemoved case it might have beendestructed already).

QEvent.ChildPolished eventsare sent to widgets when children are polished, or when polishedchildren are added. If you receive a child polished event, thechild's construction is usually completed. However, this is notguaranteed, and multiple polish events may be delivered during theexecution of a widget's constructor.

For every child widget, you receive one ChildAdded event, zero or more ChildPolished events, and one ChildRemoved event.

The ChildPolished event isomitted if a child is removed immediately after it is added. If achild is polished several times during construction anddestruction, you may receive several child polished events for thesame child, each time with a different virtual table.

See alsoevent().

list-of-QObject QObject.children (self)

Returns a list of child objects. The QObjectList class is definedin the <QObject> header file as the following:

The first child added is the first object in the list and the last childadded is the last object in the list,i.e. new children are appended at the end.

Note that the list order changes when QWidget children are raised or lowered. A widget that is raised becomesthe last object in the list, and a widget that is lowered becomesthe first object in the list.

See alsofindChild(), findChildren(), parent(), and setParent().

bool QObject.connect (QObject, SIGNAL(), QObject, SLOT(), Qt.ConnectionType = Qt.AutoConnection)

Creates a connection of the given type from thesignal in the sender object to the method inthe receiver object. Returns true if the connectionsucceeds; otherwise returns false.

You must use the SIGNAL() and SLOT() macroswhen specifying the signal and the method, forexample:

This example ensures that the label always displays the currentscroll bar value. Note that the signal and slots parameters mustnot contain any variable names, only the type. E.g. the followingwould not work and return false:

A signal can also be connected to another signal:

In this example, the MyWidget constructor relays asignal from a private member variable, and makes it available undera name that relates to MyWidget.

A signal can be connected to many slots and signals. Manysignals can be connected to one slot.

If a signal is connected to several slots, the slots areactivated in the same order as the order the connection was made,when the signal is emitted.

The function returns true if it successfully connects the signalto the slot. It will return false if it cannot create theconnection, for example, if QObject isunable to verify the existence of either signal ormethod, or if their signatures aren't compatible.

By default, a signal is emitted for every connection you make;two signals are emitted for duplicate connections. You can breakall of these connections with a single disconnect() call. If you pass theQt.UniqueConnectiontype, the connection will only be made if it is not aduplicate. If there is already a duplicate (exact same signal tothe exact same slot on the same objects), the connection will failand connect will return false.

The optional type parameter describes the type ofconnection to establish. In particular, it determines whether aparticular signal is delivered to a slot immediately or queued fordelivery at a later time. If the signal is queued, the parametersmust be of types that are known to Qt's meta-object system, becauseQt needs to copy the arguments to store them in an event behind thescenes. If you try to use a queued connection and get the errormessage

call qRegisterMetaType() toregister the data type before you establish the connection.

Note: This function is thread-safe.

See alsodisconnect(), sender(), qRegisterMetaType(), andQ_DECLARE_METATYPE().

bool QObject.connect (QObject, SIGNAL(), callable, Qt.ConnectionType = Qt.AutoConnection)

Creates a connection of the given type from thesignal in the sender object to the method inthe receiver object. Returns true if the connectionsucceeds; otherwise returns false.

This function works in the same way as connect(const QObject *sender, const char *signal, constQObject *receiver, const char *method,Qt.ConnectionType type)but it uses QMetaMethod to specifysignal and method.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.8.

See also connect(const QObject *sender, const char*signal, const QObject *receiver, const char *method,Qt.ConnectionType type).

bool QObject.connect (self, QObject, SIGNAL(), SLOT(), Qt.ConnectionType = Qt.AutoConnection)

This function overloads connect().

Connects signal from the sender object to thisobject's method.

Equivalent to connect(sender, signal,this, method, type).

Every connection you make emits a signal, so duplicateconnections emit two signals. You can break a connection usingdisconnect().

Note: This function is thread-safe.

See alsodisconnect().

QObject.connectNotify (self, SIGNAL() signal)

If you want to compare signal with a specific signal, useQLatin1String and theSIGNAL() macro as follows:

If the signal contains multiple parameters or parameters thatcontain spaces, call QMetaObject.normalizedSignature()on the result of the SIGNAL() macro.

Warning: This function violates the object-orientedprinciple of modularity. However, it might be useful when you needto perform expensive initialization only if something is connectedto a signal.

See alsoconnect() anddisconnectNotify().

QObject.customEvent (self, QEvent)

This event handler can be reimplemented in a subclass to receivecustom events. Custom events are user-defined events with a typevalue at least as large as the QEvent.User item of the QEvent.Type enum, and is typically aQEvent subclass. The event is passed inthe event parameter.

See alsoevent() andQEvent.

QObject.deleteLater (self)

The object will be deleted when control returns to the eventloop. If the event loop is not running when this function is called(e.g. deleteLater() is called on an object before QCoreApplication.exec()), theobject will be deleted once the event loop is started. IfdeleteLater() is called after the main event loop has stopped, theobject will not be deleted. Since Qt 4.8, if deleteLater() iscalled on an object that lives in a thread with no running eventloop, the object will be destroyed when the thread finishes.

Note that entering and leaving a new event loop (e.g., byopening a modal dialog) will not perform the deferreddeletion; for the object to be deleted, the control must return tothe event loop from which deleteLater() was called.

Note: It is safe to call this function more than once;when the first deferred deletion event is delivered, any pendingevents for the object are removed from the event queue.

See alsodestroyed()and QPointer.

bool QObject.disconnect (QObject, SIGNAL(), QObject, SLOT())

Disconnects signal in object sender frommethod in object receiver. Returns true if theconnection is successfully broken; otherwise returns false.

A signal-slot connection is removed when either of the objectsinvolved are destroyed.

disconnect() is typically used in three ways, as the followingexamples demonstrate.

  1. Disconnect everything connected to an object's signals:

    equivalent to the non-static overloaded function

  2. Disconnect everything connected to a specific signal:

    equivalent to the non-static overloaded function

  3. Disconnect a specific receiver:

    equivalent to the non-static overloaded function

0 may be used as a wildcard, meaning 'any signal', 'anyreceiving object', or 'any slot in the receiving object',respectively.

The sender may never be 0. (You cannot disconnect signalsfrom more than one object in a single call.)

If signal is 0, it disconnects receiver andmethod from any signal. If not, only the specified signal isdisconnected.

If receiver is 0, it disconnects anything connected tosignal. If not, slots in objects other than receiverare not disconnected.

If method is 0, it disconnects anything that is connectedto receiver. If not, only slots named method will bedisconnected, and all other slots are left alone. The methodmust be 0 if receiver is left out, so you cannot disconnecta specifically-named slot on all objects.

Note: This function is thread-safe.

See alsoconnect().

bool QObject.disconnect (QObject, SIGNAL(), callable)

Disconnects signal in object sender frommethod in object receiver. Returns true if theconnection is successfully broken; otherwise returns false.

This function provides the same possibilities likedisconnect(const QObject *sender, constchar *signal, const QObject *receiver,const char *method) but uses QMetaMethod to represent the signal and themethod to be disconnected.

Additionally this function returnsfalse and no signals and slotsdisconnected if:

  1. signal is not a member of sender class or one of itsparent classes.
  2. method is not a member of receiver class or one of itsparent classes.
  3. signal instance represents not a signal.

QMetaMethod() may be used as wildcard in the meaning 'anysignal' or 'any slot in receiving object'. In the same way 0 can beused for receiver in the meaning 'any receiving object'. Inthis case method should also be QMetaMethod(). senderparameter should be never 0.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.8.

See also disconnect(const QObject *sender, const char*signal, const QObject *receiver, const char *method).

QObject.disconnectNotify (self, SIGNAL() signal)

See connectNotify() foran example of how to compare signal with a specificsignal.

Warning: This function violates the object-orientedprinciple of modularity. However, it might be useful for optimizingaccess to expensive resources.

See alsodisconnect() and connectNotify().

QObject.dumpObjectInfo (self)

See alsodumpObjectTree().

QObject.dumpObjectTree (self)

See alsodumpObjectInfo().

list-of-QByteArray QObject.dynamicPropertyNames (self)

Returns the names of all properties that were dynamically addedto the object using setProperty().

This function was introduced in Qt 4.2.

QObject.emit (self, SIGNAL(), ...)

bool QObject.event (self, QEvent)

This virtual function receives events to an object and shouldreturn true if the event e was recognized and processed.

The event() function can be reimplemented to customize thebehavior of an object.

See alsoinstallEventFilter(),timerEvent(), QApplication.sendEvent(),QApplication.postEvent(),and QWidget.event().

bool QObject.eventFilter (self, QObject, QEvent)

Filters events if this object has been installed as an eventfilter for the watched object.

In your reimplementation of this function, if you want to filterthe event out, i.e. stop it being handled further, returntrue; otherwise return false.

Example:

Notice in the example above that unhandled events are passed tothe base class's eventFilter() function, since the base class mighthave reimplemented eventFilter() for its own internal purposes.

Warning: If you delete the receiver object in thisfunction, be sure to return true. Otherwise, Qt will forward theevent to the deleted object and the program might crash.

See alsoinstallEventFilter().

QObject QObject.findChild (self, type type, QString name = QString())

If there is more than one child matching the search, the mostdirect ancestor is returned. If there are several direct ancestors,it is undefined which one will be returned. In that case, findChildren() should be used.

This example returns a child QPushButton of parentWidget named'button1':

This example returns a QListWidget child ofparentWidget:

See alsofindChildren().

QObject QObject.findChild (self, tuple types, QString name = QString())

list-of-QObject QObject.findChildren (self, type type, QString name = QString())

The following example shows how to find a list of child QWidgets of the specified parentWidgetnamed widgetname:

This example returns all QPushButtons that are childrenof parentWidget:

See alsofindChild().

list-of-QObject QObject.findChildren (self, tuple types, QString name = QString())

This function overloads findChildren().

Returns the children of this object that can be cast to type Tand that have names matching the regular expression regExp,or an empty list if there are no such objects. The search isperformed recursively.

list-of-QObject QObject.findChildren (self, type type, QRegExpregExp)

list-of-QObject QObject.findChildren (self, tuple types, QRegExpregExp)

bool QObject.inherits (self, str classname)

Returns true if this object is an instance of a class thatinherits className or a QObjectsubclass that inherits className; otherwise returnsfalse.

A class is considered to inherit itself.

Example:

If you need to determine whether an object is an instance of aparticular class for the purpose of casting it, consider usingqobject_cast<Type *>(object) instead.

See alsometaObject() and qobject_cast().

QObject.installEventFilter (self, QObject)

Installs an event filter filterObj on this object. Forexample:

An event filter is an object that receives all events that aresent to this object. The filter can either stop the event orforward it to this object. The event filter filterObjreceives events via its eventFilter() function. The eventFilter() function must returntrue if the event should be filtered, (i.e. stopped); otherwise itmust return false.

If multiple event filters are installed on a single object, thefilter that was installed last is activated first.

Here's a KeyPressEater class that eats the key pressesof its monitored objects:

And here's how to install it on two widgets:

The QShortcut class, for example,uses this technique to intercept shortcut key presses.

Warning: If you delete the receiver object in youreventFilter() function, besure to return true. If you return false, Qt sends the event to thedeleted object and the program will crash.

Note that the filtering object must be in the same thread asthis object. If filterObj is in a different thread, thisfunction does nothing. If either filterObj or this objectare moved to a different thread after calling this function, theevent filter will not be called until both objects have the samethread affinity again (it is not removed).

See alsoremoveEventFilter(), eventFilter(), and event().

bool QObject.isWidgetType (self)

Calling this function is equivalent to callinginherits('QWidget'), except that it ismuch faster.

QObject.killTimer (self, int id)

The timer identifier is returned by startTimer() when a timer event isstarted.

See alsotimerEvent() and startTimer().

QMetaObject QObject.metaObject (self)

Returns a pointer to the meta-object of this object.

Qt No Such Slot In Derived Classroom

A meta-object contains information about a class that inheritsQObject, e.g. class name, superclassname, properties, signals and slots. Every QObject subclass that contains the Q_OBJECT macro will have ameta-object.

The meta-object information is required by the signal/slotconnection mechanism and the property system. The inherits() function also makes use ofthe meta-object.

If you have no pointer to an actual object instance but stillwant to access the meta-object of a class, you can use staticMetaObject.

Example:

See alsostaticMetaObject.

QObject.moveToThread (self, QThreadthread)

Changes the thread affinity for this object and its children.The object cannot be moved if it has a parent. Event processingwill continue in the targetThread.

To move an object to the main thread, use QApplication.instance() toretrieve a pointer to the current application, and then useQApplication.thread() toretrieve the thread in which the application lives. Forexample:

If targetThread is zero, all event processing for thisobject and its children stops.

Note that all active timers for the object will be reset. Thetimers are first stopped in the current thread and restarted (withthe same interval) in the targetThread. As a result,constantly moving an object between threads can postpone timerevents indefinitely.

A QEvent.ThreadChange eventis sent to this object just before the thread affinity is changed.You can handle this event to perform any special processing. Notethat any new events that are posted to this object will be handledin the targetThread.

Derived

Warning: This function is not thread-safe; thecurrent thread must be same as the current thread affinity. Inother words, this function can only 'push' an object from thecurrent thread to another thread, it cannot 'pull' an object fromany arbitrary thread to the current thread.

See alsothread().

QString QObject.objectName (self)

QObject QObject.parent (self)

Returns a pointer to the parent object.

See alsosetParent()and children().

QVariant QObject.property (self, str name)

Information about all available properties is provided throughthe metaObject() and dynamicPropertyNames().

See alsosetProperty(), QVariant.isValid(), metaObject(), and dynamicPropertyNames().

QObject.pyqtConfigure (self, object)

int QObject.receivers (self, SIGNAL() signal)

QObject.removeEventFilter (self, QObject)

Removes an event filter object obj from this object. Therequest is ignored if such an event filter has not beeninstalled.

All event filters for this object are automatically removed whenthis object is destroyed.

It is always safe to remove an event filter, even during eventfilter activation (i.e. from the eventFilter() function).

See alsoinstallEventFilter(),eventFilter(), and event().

QObject QObject.sender (self)

Returns a pointer to the object that sent the signal, if calledin a slot activated by a signal; otherwise it returns 0. Thepointer is valid only during the execution of the slot that callsthis function from this object's thread context.

The pointer returned by this function becomes invalid if thesender is destroyed, or if the slot is disconnected from thesender's signal.

Warning: This function violates the object-orientedprinciple of modularity. However, getting access to the sendermight be useful when many signals are connected to a singleslot.

Warning: As mentioned above, the return value of thisfunction is not valid when the slot is called via a Qt.DirectConnection from athread different from this object's thread. Do not use thisfunction in this type of scenario.

See alsosenderSignalIndex() andQSignalMapper.

int QObject.senderSignalIndex (self)

Returns the meta-method index of the signal that called thecurrently executing slot, which is a member of the class returnedby sender(). If called outside ofa slot activated by a signal, -1 is returned.

For signals with default parameters, this function will alwaysreturn the index with all parameters, regardless of which was usedwith connect(). For example, thesignal destroyed(QObject *obj = 0) will have two differentindexes (with and without the parameter), but this function willalways return the index with a parameter. This does not apply whenoverloading signals with different parameters.

Warning: This function violates the object-orientedprinciple of modularity. However, getting access to the signalindex might be useful when many signals are connected to a singleslot.

Warning: The return value of this function is not validwhen the slot is called via a Qt.DirectConnection from athread different from this object's thread. Do not use thisfunction in this type of scenario.

This function was introduced in Qt 4.8.

See alsosender(),QMetaObject.indexOfSignal(),and QMetaObject.method().

QObject.setObjectName (self, QString name)

QObject.setParent (self, QObject)

The QObject argument, if not None, causes self to be owned by Qt instead of PyQt.

Makes the object a child of parent.

See alsoparent() andQWidget.setParent().

bool QObject.setProperty (self, str name, QVariant value)

Information about all available properties is provided throughthe metaObject() and dynamicPropertyNames().

Dynamic properties can be queried again using property() and can be removed bysetting the property value to an invalid QVariant. Changing the value of a dynamicproperty causes a QDynamicPropertyChangeEventto be sent to the object.

Note: Dynamic properties starting with '_q_' are reservedfor internal purposes.

See alsoproperty(),metaObject(), and dynamicPropertyNames().

bool QObject.signalsBlocked (self)

See alsoblockSignals().

int QObject.startTimer (self, int interval)

A timer event will occur every interval millisecondsuntil killTimer() is called.If interval is 0, then the timer event occurs once everytime there are no more window system events to process.

The virtual timerEvent()function is called with the QTimerEvent event parameter class when atimer event occurs. Reimplement this function to get timerevents.

If multiple timers are running, the QTimerEvent.timerId() can be usedto find out which timer was activated.

Example:

Note that QTimer's accuracy depends onthe underlying operating system and hardware. Most platformssupport an accuracy of 20 milliseconds; some provide more. If Qt isunable to deliver the requested number of timer events, it willsilently discard some.

Qt No Such Slot In Derived Classes

The QTimer class provides a high-levelprogramming interface with single-shot timers and timer signalsinstead of events. There is also a QBasicTimer class that is more lightweightthan QTimer and less clumsy than usingtimer IDs directly.

See alsotimerEvent(), killTimer(), and QTimer.singleShot().

QThread QObject.thread (self)

Returns the thread in which the object lives.

See alsomoveToThread().

QObject.timerEvent (self, QTimerEvent)

This event handler can be reimplemented in a subclass to receivetimer events for the object.

QTimer provides a higher-levelinterface to the timer functionality, and also more generalinformation about timers. The timer event is passed in theevent parameter.

See alsostartTimer(), killTimer(), and event().

QString QObject.tr (self, str sourceText, str disambiguation = None, int n = -1)

See Writing Source Codefor Translation for a detailed description of Qt's translationmechanisms in general, and the Disambiguationsection for information on disambiguation.

Warning: This method is reentrant only if all translatorsare installed before calling this method. Installing orremoving translators while performing translations is notsupported. Doing so will probably result in crashes or otherundesirable behavior.

See alsotrUtf8(),QApplication.translate(),QTextCodec.setCodecForTr(),and Internationalization withQt.

QString QObject.trUtf8 (self, str sourceText, str disambiguation = None, int n = -1)

See alsotr(), QApplication.translate(),and Internationalization withQt.

object QObject.__getattr__ (self, str name)

Qt No Such Slot In Derived Class C

Qt Signal Documentation

void destroyed (QObject* = 0)

See alsodeleteLater() and QPointer.

Member Documentation

QMetaObject staticMetaObject

This member should be treated as a constant.

This variable stores the meta-object for the class.

A meta-object contains information about a class that inheritsQObject, e.g. class name, superclassname, properties, signals and slots. Every class that contains theQ_OBJECT macro will also have ameta-object.

The meta-object information is required by the signal/slotconnection mechanism and the property system. The inherits() function also makes use ofthe meta-object.

If you have a pointer to an object, you can use metaObject() to retrieve themeta-object associated with that object.

Qt No Such Slot In Derived Class Example

Example:

See alsometaObject().

PyQt 4.11.4 for X11Copyright © Riverbank Computing Ltd and The Qt Company 2015Qt 4.8.7