@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Decide who can call runRecognitionScript. You can choose the GUI thread, meaning you should assert that you are currently in the GUI thread when the constructor runs (because that's where the QProcess is created) and another assert inside runRecognitionScript. Or you do the same with the worker thread. Or you decide that anyone can call runRecognitionScript because runRecognitionScript will automatically switch to the right thread when called from the wrong thread.
The issue is as you said (if I understood you correctly): when instantiating my class before moving it to the new workerthread. The constructor of QProcess is being called as well. The Qprocess p now belongs to the (let s call it for now) mainthread. Once I move to the workerthread and execute a function there. The process p belongs to the mainthread and I therefor cannot access it anymore from my workerthread.
solution which I used: create a dynamic QProcess p using new inside the workerthread.
rather that declaring QProcess p as a class member. @nwp ^
that s what I was taught to do in Qt multiple years back
at uni
@sehe would you mind explaining why any new is bad? If it were on an embedded device I would totally understand and agree, but on a desktop environment...
I stumbled upon Stack Overflow question Memory leak with std::string when using std::list<std::string>, and one of the comments says this:
Stop using new so much. I can't see any reason you used new anywhere
you did. You can create objects by value in C++ and it's one of the
huge advantag...
new is bad because you have to remember to delete which is unnecessarily difficult. But Qt forces you to do it because it used a non-standard ownership model, which sucks a lot.
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Some argue that C++ does have a garbage collector. A typical implementation of a garbage collector is to do reference counting on pointers. That's what std::shared_ptr does. It is just that C++ allows you not to use the garbage collector which is usually a bad decision.
@LandonZeKepitelOfGreytBritn Depends on if the destructor does something useful. Sometimes it finishes writing a file and not doing that leaves you with garbage data.
hey guys, I'm having a "cant convert from const Object* to Object* const" problem which I cant understand why its happening. Heres a ~30 lines snippet and I'd appreciate if someone can help! pastebin.com/KjaNu28Z
@YvesHenri the keyword const always to the word/symbol on its left side. If there is nothing on its left side... only one thing left to do: look to the right of the keyword
Changing Qt's interface to take std::unique_ptrs when it takes ownership would make sense. It's probably even doable without that much effort and at least communicates what is happening.
But then people would need to understand std::unique_ptr and std::move and that is probably beyond what they want to expect from an average Qt user.
the second param expects a const* Object and this is whats passed to it. why its complaining about Object* const when I clearly have a const Object*? thats the question
deleteing an object that was given to Qt as a unique_ptr is allowed even though the interface doesn't communicate that. Not sure how big of a problem that is.