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I have following code:

class A : public QObject
{
    Q_OBJECT
public:
    A() : QObject()
    {
         moveToThread(&t);
         t.start();
    }
    ~A()
    {
         t.quit();
         t.wait();
    }

    void doSomething()
    { 
         QMetaObject::invokeMethod(this,"doSomethingSlot");
    }
public slots:
    void doSomethingSlot()
    {
         //do something
         emit ready();
    }
signals:
    void ready();
private:
    QThread t;
}

The question why from doSomething it must be call via QMetaObject::invokeMethod. I know that there is something with connection type. Could some one explain what is under the hood?

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1 Answer

As you haven't specified a Qt::ConnectionType, the method will be invoked as Qt::AutoConnection, which means that it will be invoked synchronously (like a normal function call) if the object's thread affinity is to the current thread, and asynchronously otherwise. "Asynchronously" means that a QEvent is constructed and pushed onto the message queue, and will be processed when the event loop reaches it.

The reason to use QMetaObject::invokeMethod if the recipient object might be in another thread is that attempting to call a slot directly on an object in another thread can lead to corruption or worse if it accesses or modifies non-thread-safe data.


与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…
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