Help on PyQt4 QProcess
Phil Thompson
phil at riverbankcomputing.com
Sat Aug 20 04:36:02 EDT 2011
On Fri, 19 Aug 2011 14:32:12 -0700 (PDT), Edgar Fuentes
<fuentesej at gmail.com> wrote:
> On Aug 19, 4:21 pm, Carl Banks <pavlovevide... at gmail.com> wrote:
>> On Friday, August 19, 2011 12:55:40 PM UTC-7, Edgar Fuentes wrote:
>> > On Aug 19, 1:56 pm, Phil Thompson
>> > wrote:
>> > > On Fri, 19 Aug 2011 10:15:20 -0700 (PDT), Edgar Fuentes
>> > > <fuen... at gmail.com> wrote:
>> > > > Dear friends,
>>
>> > > > I need execute an external program from a gui using PyQt4, to
avoid
>> > > > that hang the main thread, i must connect the signal
>> > > > "finished(int)"
>> > > > of a QProcess to work properly.
>>
>> > > > for example, why this program don't work?
>>
>> > > > from PyQt4.QtCore import QProcess
>> > > > pro = QProcess() # create QProcess object
>> > > > pro.connect(pro, SIGNAL('started()'), lambda
>> > > > x="started":print(x)) # connect
>> > > > pro.connect(pro, SIGNAL("finished(int)"), lambda
>> > > > x="finished":print(x))
>> > > > pro.start('python',['hello.py']) # star hello.py
program
>> > > > (contain print("hello world!"))
>> > > > timeout = -1
>> > > > pro.waitForFinished(timeout)
>> > > > print(pro.readAllStandardOutput().data())
>>
>> > > > output:
>>
>> > > > started
>> > > > 0
>> > > > b'hello world!\n'
>>
>> > > > see that not emit the signal finished(int)
>>
>> > > Yes it is, and your lambda slot is printing "0" which is the return
>> > > code
>> > > of the process.
>>
>> > > Phil
>>
>> > Ok, but the output should be:
>>
>> > started
>> > b'hello world!\n'
>> > finished
>>
>> > no?.
>>
>> > thanks Phil
>>
>> Two issues. First of all, your slot for the finished function does not
>> have the correct prototype, and it's accidentally not throwing an
>> exception because of your unnecessary use of default arguments.
Anyway,
>> to fix that, try this:
>>
>> pro.connect(pro, SIGNAL("finished(int)"), lambda v,
>> x="finished":print(x))
>>
>> Notice that it adds an argument to the lambda (v) that accepts the int
>> argument of the signal. If you don't have that argument there, the int
>> argument goes into x, which is why Python prints 0 instead of
"finished".
>>
>> Second, processess run asynchrously, and because of line-buffering, IO
>> can output asynchronously, and so there's no guarantee what order
output
>> occurs. You might try calling the python subprocess with the '-u'
switch
>> to force unbuffered IO, which might be enough to force synchronous
output
>> (depending on how signal/slot and subprocess semantics are
implemented).
>>
>> Carl Banks
>
> Thanks Carl, your intervention was very helpful for me, this solve my
> semantic error. I need to study more about signal/slots and process.
In which case you should look at the modern, Pythonic connection syntax
rather than the old one...
pro.started.connect(lambda: print("started"))
pro.finished.connect(lambda: print("finished"))
Phil
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