In my Text Editor application, I save the users font format selection as a preference.
Signals and slots are first set up in the constructor, and then the preferences are read as in the code below:
Constructor:
boldAction->setCheckable(true);
italicAction->setCheckable(true);
underlineAction->setCheckable(true);
fontSizeSelector->setCheckable(false);
connect(boldAction,SIGNAL(changed()),this,SLOT(bold()));
connect(italicAction,SIGNAL(triggered()),this,SLOT(italic()));
connect(underlineAction,SIGNAL(triggered()),this,SLOT(underline()));
ReadUserPreferences():
void TextEditor::readUserPreferences()
{
QSettings userPreferences(QSettings::NativeFormat,QSettings::UserScope,ORGANIZATION_TITLE,APPLICATION_TITLE);
this->boldAction->setChecked( userPreferences.value("appearance/bold").toBool() );
this->italicAction->setChecked( userPreferences.value("appearance/italic").toBool() );
this->underlineAction->setChecked( userPreferences.value("appearance/underline").toBool());
//other code.
}
Now, in the readPreferences function, when boldAction->setChecked(true);, shouldn't the text become bold because the signal and slot mechanism has already been defined? If so, then why isn't it working on my application? The bold function itself works perfectly fine.
Is there a better way of doing this than what I'm doing? Thanks for your help
There appear to be two things wrong here.
Firstly, you are connecting to the wrong signals. The changed signal does not pass a value indicating the action's checked state, and triggered is not emitted at all when setChecked is called. You need to connect to the toggled signal.
Secondly, the signal will only be emitted if the checked state has changed. So if the action is already checked and the user preference evaluates to true, nothing will happen. You probably need to take steps to ensure the appropriate default state is set before connecting the signals.
Related
I am trying to dynamically change the source Arrival rate using a variable "arrivalRate" linked to a slider (see image).
However, during the simulation the initial rate remains the same, even when I change the arrivalRate. I know that the arrivalRate variable is changing successfully (it is an int) - but this has no effect on the source rate during the simulation.
Anyone have an idea what the issue is - or how to fix it?
Whenever you see the = sign before a field, it means it's not dynamic, it is only evaluated at the start of the model or at the element creation and will not change throughout the simulation run unless you force it. In other words, the variable arrivalRate is checked only once to assign the source's arrival rate and that's it.
Now if you want to change it dynamically, in the slider's Action field, write the following:
source.set_rate( arrivalRate );
I'm linking an arcade button connected to a USB encoder with a Max patch. The button is behaving strangely. Here's what happens:
I have the button mapped to the a key. When Max is open, this functionality breaks. Even outside of Max. Even once I close Max, I need to remap the key. I'm not using MAME or anything like that; just JoytoKey for the mapping.
This issue is negated partially through use of the HIobject. Max recognizes the button and I can use it, however it's not functioning as an on/off. Rather a bang is sent on button press and release. How do I make the button work normally (send a single bang on press, and none on release)?
Here's my patch, if it helps. I don't know how useful it is without my video files:
<pre><code>
----------begin_max5_patcher----------
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v1cvy7Kml79T0eYYRiKXsAeTBkkccUdXpbeEyNGTCZU4qou+MdE9+qypUK.
-----------end_max5_patcher-----------
</code></pre>
It's hard to give an exact answer without knowing what your USB device outputs, however in your patch whatever exits the [hi] object goes into the [live.text] button, which is set to Button mode, always converting it to a bang.
In the patch below I set the [live.text] button to Toggle mode. I also took the liberty of cleaning some other things up.
The next thing though is that you will need to find out what part of the output of the hi object is the information you are looking for. You can do that with a [print] object. Then you can select that number with an [unpack] and select the 1's and use that to trigger [random] (see the patch below).
----------begin_max5_patcher----------
1559.3oc6Z0ziiZCF9bxuBDmmF4O3ypdpWpZu11SqVE4P7Lw6BXpwjYFsZ+u
WaCjPBDvIgY6glLRCAaiseedd+zjusbg6F9azRWme14SNKV7skKVXZR2vhl6
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H0jBmXgMmHsykNQi4TDiFVDg20B6YwBi8lAI7.NM5RMGqDxh0Qe1L28BoOP2
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WcbbQdEqINfR5VpOYURYoNclxBRsfXNX8kee4+Jwi4ZG
-----------end_max5_patcher-----------
I am using ag-grid/ag-grid-angular to provide an editable grid of data backed by a database. When a user edits a cell I want to be able to post the update to the backend service and if the request is successful update the grid and if not undo the user's changes and show an error.
I have approached this problem from a couple different angles but have yet to find the solution that meets all my requirements and am also curious about what the best practice would be to implement this kind of functionality.
My first thought was to leverage the cellValueChanged event. With this approach I can see the old and new values and then make a call to my service to update the database. If the request is successful then everything is great and works as expected. However, if the request fails for some reason then I need to be able to undo the user's changes. Since I have access to the old value I can easily do something like event.node.setDataValue(event.column, event.oldValue) to revert the user's changes. However, since I am updating the grid again this actually triggers the cellValueChanged event a second time. I have no way of knowing that this is the result of undoing the user's changes so I unnecessarily make a call to my service again to update the data even though the original request was never successful in updating the data.
I have also tried using a custom cell editor to get in between when the user is finished editing a cell and when the grid is actually updated. However, it appears that there is no way to integrate an async method in any of these classes to be able to wait for a response from the server to decide whether or not to actually apply the user's changes. E.g.
isCancelBeforeStart(): boolean {
this.service.updateData(event.data).subscribe(() => {
return false;
}, error => {
return true;
});
}
does not work because this method is synchronous and I need to be able to wait for a response from my service before deciding whether to cancel the edit or not.
Is there something I am missing or not taking in to account? Or another way to approach this problem to get my intended functionality? I realize this could be handled much easier with dedicated edit/save buttons but I am ideally looking for an interactive grid that is saving the changes to the backend as the user is making changes and providing feedback in cases where something went wrong.
Any help/feedback is greatly appreciated!
I understand what you are trying to do, and I think that the best approach is going to be to use a "valueSetter" function on each of your editable columns.
With a valueSetter, the grid's value will not be directly updated - you will have to update your bound data to have it reflected in the grid.
When the valueSetter is called by the grid at the end of the edit, you'll probably want to record the original value somehow, update your bound data (so that the grid will reflect the change), and then kick off the back-end save, and return immediately from the valueSetter function.
(It's important to return immediately from the valueSetter function to keep the grid responsive. Since the valueSetter call from the grid is synchronous, if you try to wait for the server response, you're going to lock up the grid while you're waiting.)
Then, if the back-end update succeeds, there's nothing to do, and if it fails, you can update your bound data to reflect the original value.
With this method, you won't have the problem of listening for the cellValueChanged event.
The one issue that you might have to deal with is what to do if the user changes the cell value, and then changes it again before the first back-end save returns.
onCellValueChanged: (event) => {
if (event.oldValue === event.newValue) {
return;
}
try {
// apiUpdate(event.data)
}
catch {
event.node.data[event.colDef.Field] = event.oldValue;
event.node.setDataValue(event.column, event.oldValue);
}
}
By changing the value back on node.data first, when setDataValue() triggers the change event again, oldValue and newValue are actually the same now and the function returns, avoiding the rather slow infinite loop.
I think it's because you change the data behind the scenes directly without agGrid noticing with node.data = , then make a change that agGrid recognises and rerenders the cell by calling setDataValue. Thereby tricking agGrid into behaving.
I would suggest a slightly better approach than StangerString, but to credit him the idea came from his approach. Rather than using a test of the oldValue/newValue and allowing the event to be called twice, you can go around the change detection by doing the following.
event.node.data[event.colDef.field] = event.oldValue;
event.api.refreshCells({ rowNodes: [event.node], columns: [event.column.colId] });
What that does is sets the data directly in the data store used by aggrid, then you tell it to refresh that grid. That will prevent the onCellValueChanged event from having to be called again.
(if you arent using colIds you can use the field or pass the whole column, I think any of them work)
I have three intents, "Cold Exposure", "Poisoning" and "Frostbite". Each intent has suggestion chips to move to the next intent, i.e. the "Cold Exposure" shows a chip of "Poisoning" and "Poisoning" shows a suggestion chip of "Frostbite".
All are follow up intents of the Default Welcome Intent, so all have the "Default Welcome Intent- followup" input context.
My problem is, when I call Cold Exposure and then call Poisoning, there's no problem. However, when I call Cold Exposure and then Poisoning, and then Frostbite, I get an error "MalformedResponse 'final_response' must be set." . Im not able to call any three intents back to back. I really dont know why this is happening.Im using v2 API.
This is the only error I have in my program, so it would be great if this could be solved quick.This is a screenshot of my intents.
What is the lifespan of the "Default Welcome Intent- followup" output context in the Default Welcome Intent?
By default, when you create followup Intents, the output context lifespan set in the root Intent is 2. Each action decrements this count and the context disappears when the count reaches 0.
Try increasing the lifespan (in the grey circle next to the output context name) to something like 10 (or any other number you see fit) and remove it manually when needed in later intents (by setting it as output context with a lifespan of 0).
Florent.
I actually wouldn't have expected that the followup intents would work the way you're trying. They're all followups to the original intent, rather than to each other. So it could be that the lifespan of the original intent's Context has expired by the third one. In this case, it would revert to the Fallback Intent.
But the reason for the error message itself is that you're not sending back a reply. If you're using a fulfillment, it means it isn't sending a reply. If you're not, it could be that the "Frostbite" Intent doesn't have a reply set or that your Fallback Intent doesn't have a reply set.
I just installed dwm on Arch and am loving it. However, I found that I have no use for the status bar except when I'm switching tags, so I thought a useful feature would be to only display it while MODKEY is pressed.
I know that MODKEY+b toggles the bar, but I'd like to be able to peek at it while MODKEY's being held down. I'd also prefer that this doesn't consume the event, so I'll still be able to chain additional keys onto the sequence.
The only thing I found online about this was a post from Lokichaos (https://warosu.org/g/thread/24122078):
I split the difference with "peek" behavior. When I hold down Mod4 (my main dwm modkey) it shows the bar (but does not reserve space for it). The bar also auto-shows when there is an urgent client waiting (so I can see the highlighted tag). [...]
Is there any way I could implement this with my config.h file, or would I need to get into the nitty-gritty dwm.c? Any ideas as to how this could be done in an organized fashion so that I could bind other actions to key presses and releases?
Thanks for your help!
--EDIT--
This patch allows you to listen to release events, (they even show you how to toggle the bar with pressing/releasing MODKEY+b), but I'm only able to listen to presses and releases on non-mod keys. Again, my goal is to have the bar display when I press MODKEY, and disappear again when I release it.
Here are the three things I've tried in config.h:
type modifier key function argument
{ KeyRelease,MODKEY, 0, togglebar, {0} },
{ KeyRelease,MODKEY, NULL, togglebar, {0} },
{ KeyRelease,MODKEY, XK_Super_L, togglebar, {0} },
...to no avail.
You may try holdbar patch to serve your purpose. I am using this and it is working seamlessly without any errors.
Note that after using this, togglebar will not work any more and bar will be always hidden. Also you cannot map HOLDKEY to simply MODKEY as it takes keysym bindings. You can get them by running xev and pressing the required key. It's keysym value in hexadecimal will be displayed. I use the Super (Windows) key and it's keysym value is 0xffeb. I have applied the same patch. If you want to see, you can view it on Github.