Qt Quick TableView 范例 - 康威的人生游戏

Conway’s Game of Life example shows how the QML TableView type can be used to display a C++ model that the user can pan around.

运行范例

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QML 用户界面

TableView {
    id: tableView
    anchors.fill: parent
    rowSpacing: 1
    columnSpacing: 1
    ScrollBar.horizontal: ScrollBar {}
    ScrollBar.vertical: ScrollBar {}
    delegate: Rectangle {
        id: cell
        implicitWidth: 15
        implicitHeight: 15
        required property var model
        required property bool value
        color: value ? "#f3f3f4" : "#b5b7bf"
        MouseArea {
            anchors.fill: parent
            onClicked: parent.model.value = !parent.value
        }
    }
					

范例使用 TableView component to display a grid of cells. Each of these cells is drawn on the screen by the TableView ’s delegate, which is a Rectangle QML component. We read the cell’s value and we change it using model.value when the user clicks it.

contentX: (contentWidth - width) / 2;
contentY: (contentHeight - height) / 2;
					

当应用程序启动时, TableView is scrolled to its center by using its contentX and contentY properties to update the scroll position, and the contentWidth and contentHeight to compute where the view should be scrolled to.

model: GameOfLifeModel {
    id: gameOfLifeModel
}
					

C++ 模型

class GameOfLifeModel : public QAbstractTableModel
{
    Q_OBJECT
    QML_ELEMENT
    Q_ENUMS(Roles)
public:
    enum Roles {
        CellRole
    };
    QHash<int, QByteArray> roleNames() const override {
        return {
            { CellRole, "value" }
        };
    }
    explicit GameOfLifeModel(QObject *parent = nullptr);
    int rowCount(const QModelIndex &parent = QModelIndex()) const override;
    int columnCount(const QModelIndex &parent = QModelIndex()) const override;
    QVariant data(const QModelIndex &index, int role = Qt::DisplayRole) const override;
    bool setData(const QModelIndex &index, const QVariant &value,
                 int role = Qt::EditRole) override;
    Qt::ItemFlags flags(const QModelIndex &index) const override;
    Q_INVOKABLE void nextStep();
    Q_INVOKABLE bool loadFile(const QString &fileName);
    Q_INVOKABLE void loadPattern(const QString &plainText);
    Q_INVOKABLE void clear();
private:
    static constexpr int width = 256;
    static constexpr int height = 256;
    static constexpr int size = width * height;
    using StateContainer = std::array<bool, size>;
    StateContainer m_currentState;
    int cellNeighborsCount(const QPoint &cellCoordinates) const;
    static bool areCellCoordinatesValid(const QPoint &coordinates);
    static QPoint cellCoordinatesFromIndex(int cellIndex);
    static std::size_t cellIndex(const QPoint &coordinates);
};
					

GameOfLifeModel class extends QAbstractTableModel so it can be used as the model of our TableView component. Therefore, it needs to implement some functions so the TableView component can interact with the model. As you can see in the private part of the class, the model uses a fixed-size array to store the current state of all the cells. We also use the QML_ELEMENT macro in order to expose the class to QML.

int GameOfLifeModel::rowCount(const QModelIndex &parent) const
{
    if (parent.isValid())
        return 0;
    return height;
}
int GameOfLifeModel::columnCount(const QModelIndex &parent) const
{
    if (parent.isValid())
        return 0;
    return width;
}
					

在这里, rowCount and columnCount methods are implemented so the TableView component can know the size of the table. It simply returns the values of the width and height constants.

QVariant GameOfLifeModel::data(const QModelIndex &index, int role) const
{
    if (!index.isValid() || role != CellRole)
        return QVariant();
    return QVariant(m_currentState[cellIndex({index.column(), index.row()})]);
}
					

This method is called when the TableView component requests some data from the model. In our example, we only have one piece of data by cell: whether it is alive or not. This information is represented by the CellRole value of the Roles enum in our C++ code; this corresponds to the property in the QML code (the link between these two is made by the roleNames() function of our C++ class).

GameOfLifeModel class can identify which cell was the data requested from with the index parameter, which is a QModelIndex that contains a row and a column.

更新数据

bool GameOfLifeModel::setData(const QModelIndex &index, const QVariant &value, int role)
{
    if (role != CellRole || data(index, role) == value)
        return false;
    m_currentState[cellIndex({index.column(), index.row()})] = value.toBool();
    emit dataChanged(index, index, {role});
    return true;
}
					

setData method is called when a property’s value is set from the QML interface: in our example, it toggles a cell’s state when it is clicked. In the same way as the data() function does, this method receives an index role parameter. Additionally, the new value is passed as a QVariant , that we convert to a boolean using the toBool 函数。

When we update the internal state of our model object, we need to emit a dataChanged signal to tell the TableView component that it needs to update the displayed data. In this case, only the cell that was clicked is affected, thus the range of the table that has to be updated begins and ends at the cell’s index.

void GameOfLifeModel::nextStep()
{
    StateContainer newValues;
    for (std::size_t i = 0; i < size; ++i) {
        bool currentState = m_currentState[i];
        int cellNeighborsCount = this->cellNeighborsCount(cellCoordinatesFromIndex(static_cast<int>(i)));
        newValues[i] = currentState == true
                ? cellNeighborsCount == 2 || cellNeighborsCount == 3
                : cellNeighborsCount == 3;
    }
    m_currentState = std::move(newValues);
    emit dataChanged(index(0, 0), index(height - 1, width - 1), {CellRole});
}
					

This function can be called directly from the QML code, because it contains the Q_INVOKABLE macro in its definition. It plays an iteration of the game, either when the user clicks the 下一 button or when the Timer emits a triggered() 信号。

Following the Conway’s Game of Life rules, a new state is computed for each cell depending on the current state of its neighbors. When the new state has been computed for the whole grid, it replaces the current state and a dataChanged signal is emitted for the whole table.

bool GameOfLifeModel::loadFile(const QString &fileName)
{
    QFile file(fileName);
    if (!file.open(QIODevice::ReadOnly))
        return false;
    QTextStream in(&file);
    loadPattern(in.readAll());
    return true;
}
void GameOfLifeModel::loadPattern(const QString &plainText)
{
    clear();
    QStringList rows = plainText.split("\n");
    QSize patternSize(0, rows.count());
    for (QString row : rows) {
        if (row.size() > patternSize.width())
            patternSize.setWidth(row.size());
    }
    QPoint patternLocation((width - patternSize.width()) / 2, (height - patternSize.height()) / 2);
    for (int y = 0; y < patternSize.height(); ++y) {
        const QString line = rows[y];
        for (int x = 0; x < line.length(); ++x) {
            QPoint cellPosition(x + patternLocation.x(), y + patternLocation.y());
            m_currentState[cellIndex(cellPosition)] = line[x] == 'O';
        }
    }
    emit dataChanged(index(0, 0), index(height - 1, width - 1), {CellRole});
}
					

When the application opens, a pattern is loaded to demonstrate how Conway’s Game of Life works. These two functions load the file where the pattern is stored and parse it. As in the nextStep function, a dataChanged signal is emitted for the whole table once the pattern has been fully loaded.

范例工程 @ code.qt.io