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c++ - How to use enums in Qt signals and slots

I have some trouble with using enum types in signals. Basicly I have two classes, a state machine and a thread handling the state machine. When the state is changed I want to send a signal with the new state. I also want to represent the state using an enum. In my full blown code the state machine is implemented in a separate shared library, but the code below gives the exact same error.

When I run the code I get the following behaviour:

kotte@EMO-Ubuntu:sigenum $ ./sigenum 
Object::connect: No such slot MyThread::onNewState(state)
Test signal 
Test signal 
...

I have four files in my sample code: statemachine.h, statemachine.cpp, main.h and main.cpp. The main function simply starts the thread, the thread then creates an instance of the StateMachine and processes signals from the StateMachine. I am pretty new to Qt, so I was a bit puzzled when I realised that you have to enclose the enum with Q_ENUMS and register it with the type system. So It's fully possible that I've made some rookie mistake

The code below is a bit long, but I wanted it to be as similar to my real code as possible.

statemachine.h looks like:

// statemachine.h
#ifndef _STATEMACHINE_H
#define _STATEMACHINE_H

#include <QtCore>

class StateMachine : public QObject
{
    Q_OBJECT
    Q_ENUMS(state)

public:
    enum state {S0, S1, S2};

    void setState(state newState);

signals:
    void stateChanged(state newState);
    void testSignal(void);
};

Q_DECLARE_METATYPE(StateMachine::state);

#endif

And it is implemented as:

// statemachine.cpp
#include <QtCore>

#include "statemachine.h"

void StateMachine::setState(state newState)
{
    emit stateChanged(newState);
    emit testSignal();
}

The thread is defined as

// main.h
#ifndef _MAIN_H
#define _MAIN_H

#include <QtCore>

#include "statemachine.h"

class MyThread : public QThread
{
    Q_OBJECT

private:
    void run(void);

private slots:
    void onNewState(StateMachine::state);
    void onTestSignal(void);

private:
    StateMachine *myStateMachine;
};

#endif

And it is implemented as follows:

// main.cpp
#include <QtCore>
#include <QApplication>

#include "statemachine.h"
#include "main.h"

void MyThread::run()
{
    myStateMachine = new StateMachine();

    qRegisterMetaType<StateMachine::state>("state");

    // This does not work
    connect(myStateMachine, SIGNAL(stateChanged(state)),
            this, SLOT(onNewState(state)));

    // But this does...
    connect(myStateMachine, SIGNAL(testSignal()),
            this, SLOT(onTestSignal()));

    forever {
        // ...
        myStateMachine->setState(StateMachine::S0);
    }
}

void MyThread::onTestSignal()
{
    qDebug() << "Test signal";
}

void MyThread::onNewState(StateMachine::state newState)
{
    qDebug() << "New state is:" << newState;
}
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1 Answer

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by (71.8m points)

By using fully qualified names everywhere I got it to work

If I change the declaration of stateChanged() to

signals:
    void stateChanged(StateMachine::state newState);

And registers the type with

qRegisterMetaType<StateMachine::state>("StateMachine::state");

and also uses this name in the connect statement

connect(myStateMachine, SIGNAL(stateChanged(StateMachine::state)),
        this, SLOT(onNewState(StateMachine::state)));

Wouldn't have solved this without the input from drescherjm, thanks :-)


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