Qt
Internal/Contributor docs for the Qt SDK. <b>Note:</b> These are NOT official API docs; those are found <a href='https://doc.qt.io/'>here</a>.
Loading...
Searching...
No Matches
qt6-changes.qdoc
Go to the documentation of this file.
1// Copyright (C) 2020 The Qt Company Ltd.
2// SPDX-License-Identifier: LicenseRef-Qt-Commercial OR GFDL-1.3-no-invariants-only
3
4/*!
5 \page qtcore-changes-qt6.html
6 \title Changes to Qt Core
7 \ingroup changes-qt-5-to-6
8 \brief Changes to containers, strings, serialization and I/O classes.
9
10 Qt 6 is a result of the conscious effort to make the framework more
11 efficient and easy to use.
12
13 We try to maintain binary and source compatibility for all the public
14 APIs in each release. But some changes were inevitable in an effort to
15 make Qt a better framework.
16
17 In this topic we summarize those changes in Qt Core, and provide guidance
18 to handle them.
19
20 \section1 Container Classes
21
22 \section2 QHash, QMultiHash, QSet
23
24 \section3 qHash() Signature
25
26 For custom types, QHash and QMultiHash rely on you providing
27 a \l{qHash}{custom qHash() function}
28 in the same namespace. In Qt 4 and Qt 5, the return
29 value and optional second argument of a \c qHash function
30 was of type \c uint. In Qt 6, it is \c size_t.
31
32 That is, you need to change
33
34 \code
35 uint qHash(MyType x, uint seed);
36 \endcode
37
38 to
39
40 \code
41 size_t qHash(MyType x, size_t seed);
42 \endcode
43
44 This allows QHash, QMultiHash and QSet to hold more than 2^32 items on
45 64 bit platforms.
46
47 \section3 Stability of References
48
49 The implementation of QHash, QMultiHash and QSet in Qt 6 got changed from
50 a node based approach to a two stage lookup table. This design allows
51 to keep the memory overhead of a hash instance very small, while
52 at the same time giving good performance.
53
54 One behavioral change to note is that the new implementation
55 will not provide stable references to elements in the hash when the
56 table needs to grow, or when entries are removed. Applications that
57 rely on such stability might now run into undefined behavior.
58
59 \section3 Removal of QHash::insertMulti
60
61 In Qt 5, QHash could be used to create multi-valued hashes by using
62 QHash::insertMulti, and QMultiHash was deriving vom QHash.
63
64 In Qt 6, both types and use cases are distinct, and QHash::insertMulti
65 got removed.
66
67 \section2 QVector, QList
68
69 Prior to Qt 6, QVector and QList were separate classes. In Qt 6, they are
70 unified: Qt 5 QList implementation is gone and both classes use updated
71 QVector implementation instead. QList is the class with the actual
72 implementation and QVector is an alias (typedef) to QList.
73
74 QList's fromVector() and toVector(), and QVector's fromList() and toList(),
75 no longer involve data copying in Qt 6. They now return the object that they
76 were called for.
77
78 \section3 API Changes
79
80 QList's (and hence QVector's) size type is changed from \c int to \c
81 qsizetype. Together with the size type, all relevant methods' signatures are
82 updated to use \c qsizetype. This allows QList to hold more than 2^31 items
83 on 64 bit platforms.
84
85 When upgrading the code base to Qt 6, this API change would most likely
86 result in compiler warnings about narrowing type conversions. Having the
87 following example code:
88
89 \code
90 void myFunction(QList<MyType> &data) {
91 int size = data.size();
92 // ...
93 const int pos = getInsertPosition(size);
94 data.insert(pos, MyType());
95 // ...
96 }
97 \endcode
98
99 you would need to update it to use either \c qsizetype or an auto keyword:
100
101 \code
102 void myFunction(QList<MyType> &data) {
103 auto size = data.size();
104 // ...
105 const auto pos = getInsertPosition(size);
106 data.insert(pos, MyType());
107 // ...
108 }
109 \endcode
110
111 Alternatively, you may use type casting and cast everything to \c int or to
112 \c qsizetype.
113
114 \note If you want to build against both Qt 5 and Qt 6, the auto keyword is a
115 good solution to cover signature differences between the versions.
116
117 \section3 Memory Layout
118
119 QList received multiple changes related to the memory layout in Qt 6.
120
121 In Qt 5, \c{sizeof(QList<T>)} was equal to a size of a pointer. Now, the
122 extra pointer indirection is removed and QList data members are directly
123 stored in the object. By default, expect \c{sizeof(QList<T>)} to be equal to
124 the size of 3 pointers.
125
126 At the same time, memory layout of the elements is also updated. QList now
127 always stores its elements directly in the allocated memory region as
128 opposed to Qt 5, where certain objects were separately allocated on the heap
129 and pointers to the objects were placed into the QList instead.
130
131 Note that the latter, in particular, affects large objects. To have Qt 5
132 behavior, you could wrap your objects into smart pointers and store these
133 smart pointers in QList directly. In this case, the type of your QList would
134 be \c{QList<MySmartPointer<MyLargeObject>>} as opposed to
135 \c{QList<MyLargeObject>} in Qt 5.
136
137 \section3 Stability of References
138
139 There are several changes made to the QVector/QList implementation. The
140 QVector related one is: insertion at the beginning is optimized (similarly
141 to QList in Qt 5). The QList related one is: memory layout for the elements
142 is simplified.
143
144 \important These changes impact the stability of references. In Qt 6, you
145 should consider any size or capacity modifying method to invalidate all
146 references, even when QList is not \l{Implicit Sharing}{implicitly shared}.
147 Exceptions to this rule are documented explicitly.
148
149 Applications that rely on certain reference stability might run into
150 undefined behavior when upgraded to use Qt 6. You should pay extra attention
151 to cases where QVector or QList with a non C-compatible array layout were
152 used originally.
153
154 \section1 View classes in Qt6
155
156 \section2 General Overview
157
158 There are several new \c View classes coming with Qt6. There is the already
159 existing \l QStringView, now accompanied by \l QByteArrayView and followed
160 by a specialized \l QUtf8StringView and a more universal \l QAnyStringView.
161
162 \section2 Introduction to view classes on the example of QStringView
163
164 The QStringView class provides a unified view on UTF-16 strings with a
165 read-only subset of the QString API. Unlike QString, which keeps its own
166 copy of the string (possibly ref-counted), QStringView provides a view of
167 a string that is stored elsewhere.
168
169 \code
170 char hello[]{ "Hello." }; // narrow multi-byte string literal
171 QString str{hello}; // needs to make a copy of the string literal
172 QString strToStr(str); // atomic increment involved to not create a copy of hello again
173
174 // The above code can be re-written to avoid copying and atomic increment.
175
176 QStringView view{ u"Hello." }; // view to UTF-16 encoded string literal
177 QStringView viewToView{ view }; // view of the same UTF-16 encoded string literal
178 \endcode
179
180 The string \c "Hello." is stored in the binary and is not allocated at
181 run-time. \c view is only a view onto the string \c "Hello.", therefore
182 no copy has to be created. When we copy a QStringView, the \c viewToView
183 observes the same string as the copied-from \c view is observing. This
184 means that \c viewToView does not need to create a copy or an atomic
185 increment. They are views onto the existing string \c "Hello.".
186
187 \section2 Views as function argument
188
189 Views should be passed by value, not by reference-to-const.
190
191 \code
192 void myfun1(QStringView sv); // preferred
193 void myfun2(const QStringView &sv); // compiles and works, but slower
194 \endcode
195
196 \section2 View manipulation functions
197
198 QStringView supports functions that let us manipulate the view of the
199 string. This allows us to change the view without creating a partial copy
200 of the viewed string.
201
202 \code
203 QString pineapple = "Pineapple";
204 QString pine = pineapple.left(4);
205
206 // The above code can be re-written to avoid creating a partial copy.
207
208 QStringView pineappleView{ pineapple };
209 QStringView pineView = pineappleView.left(4);
210 \endcode
211
212 \section2 Non null-terminated strings and strings containing \c {'\0'}
213
214 QStringView supports both null-terminated and non null-terminated strings.
215 The difference comes from the way you initialize the QStringView:
216
217 \code
218 QChar aToE[]{ 'a', 'b', 'c', 'd', 'e' };
219
220 QStringView nonNull{ aToE, std::size(aToE) }; // with length given
221 QStringView nonNull{ aToE }; // automatically determines the length
222
223 QChar fToJ[]{ 'f', 'g', 'h', '\0', 'j' };
224
225 // uses given length, doesn't search for '\0', so '\0' at position 3
226 // is considered to be a part of the string similarly to 'h' and 'j
227 QStringView nonNull{ fToJ, std::size(fToJ) };
228 QStringView part{ fToJ }; //stops on the first encounter of '\0'
229 \endcode
230
231 \section2 Ownership model of views
232
233 As \c views do not own the memory they reference, care must be taken to
234 ensure that the referenced data (for example, owned by a \l QString)
235 outlives the \c view on all code paths.
236
237 \badcode
238 QStringView sayHello()
239 {
240 QString hello("Hello.");
241 return QStringView{ hello }; // hello gets out of scope and destroyed
242 }
243
244 void main()
245 {
246 QStringView hello{ sayHello() };
247 qDebug() << hello; // undefined behavior
248 }
249 \endcode
250
251 \section2 Converting an QStringView to QString
252
253 QStringView will not implicitly or explicitly convert to a QString, but can
254 create a deep copy of its data:
255
256 \code
257 void print(const QString &s) { qDebug() << s; }
258
259 void main()
260 {
261 QStringView string{ u"string"};
262
263 // print(string); // invalid, no implicit conversion
264 // QString str{ string }; // invalid, no explicit conversion
265
266 print(string.toString());
267 QString str = string.toString(); // create QString from view
268 }
269 \endcode
270
271 \section2 Important notes
272
273 By leveraging the new view classes, one can achieve a lot of performance
274 boost in many use cases. However, it is important to know that there might
275 be some caveats. Therefore it is important to remember:
276
277 \list
278 \li Views should be passed by value, not by reference-to-const.
279 \li Constructing a view with a negative length is undefined behavior.
280 \li Care must be taken to ensure that the referenced data (for example,
281 owned by a \l QString) outlives the view on all code paths.
282 \endlist
283
284 \section1 String related classes
285
286 \section2 The QStringView class
287
288 Starting with Qt6 it is generally recommended to use \l QStringView over
289 \c QStringRef. \l QStringView references a contiguous portion of a UTF-16
290 string it does not own. It acts as an interface type to all kinds of UTF-16
291 strings, without the need to construct a \l QString first. The \l QStringView
292 class exposes almost all read-only methods of \l QString and the previously
293 existing \c QStringRef class.
294
295 \note Care must be taken to ensure that the referenced string data (for
296 example, owned by a \l QString) outlives the \l QStringView on all code paths.
297
298 \note If a \l QStringView wraps a \l QString, care needs to be taken since
299 unlike \c QStringRef \l QStringView will not update the internal data pointer
300 once the \l QString data relocates.
301
302 \code
303 QString string = ...;
304 QStringView view{string};
305
306 // Appending something very long might cause a relocation and will
307 // ultimately result in a garbled QStringView.
308 string += ...;
309 \endcode
310
311 \section2 The QStringRef class
312
313 In Qt6 \l QStringRef got removed from Qt Core. To ease porting of existing
314 applications without touching the whole code-base, the \c QStringRef class
315 did not vanish completely and instead it got moved into the Qt5Compat module.
316 If you want to use \c QStringRef further, see \l {Using the Qt5Compat module}.
317
318 Unfortunately, some methods exposed by \l QString returning a \c QStringRef,
319 could not be moved to Qt5Compat. Therefore some manual porting may be
320 needed. If your code uses one or more of the following functions you need to
321 port them to use \l QStringView or \l QStringTokenizer. It is also
322 recommended to use \l {QStringView::tokenize} over \l {QStringView::split}
323 for performance critical code.
324
325 Change code using \c QStringRef:
326 \code
327 QString string = ...;
328 QStringRef left = string.leftRef(n);
329 QStringRef mid = string.midRef(n);
330 QStringRef right = string.rightRef(n);
331
332 QString value = ...;
333 const QVector<QStringRef> refs = string.splitRef(' ');
334 if (refs.contains(value))
335 return true;
336 \endcode
337
338 to:
339
340 \code
341 QString string = ...;
342 QStringView left = QStringView{string}.left(n);
343 QStringView mid = QStringView{string}.mid(n);
344 QStringView right = QStringView{string}.right(n);
345
346 QString value = ...;
347 const QList<QStringView> refs = QStringView{string}.split(u' ');
348 if (refs.contains(QStringView{value}))
349 return true;
350 // or
351 const auto refs = QStringView{string}.tokenize(u' ');
352 for (auto ref : refs) {
353 if (ref == value)
354 return true;
355 }
356 \endcode
357
358 \section1 QMutex and Related Classes
359
360 In Qt 6, QRecursiveMutex does not inherit from QMutex anymore. This change was
361 done to improve the performance of both QMutex and QRecursiveMutex.
362
363 Due to those changes, the QMutex::RecursionMode enum has been removed, and
364 QMutexLocker is now a templated class that can operate on both QMutex and
365 QRecursiveMutex.
366
367 \section1 QFuture and Related Classes
368
369 \section2 The QFuture class
370
371 To avoid unintended usage of QFuture, there were some changes to
372 QFuture API in Qt 6, which may introduce source compatibility breaks.
373
374 \section3 Implicit conversions between QFuture and other types
375
376 Conversion of \c QFuture<T> to \c T has been disabled. The casting
377 operator was calling QFuture::result(), which may lead to undefined
378 behavior if the user has moved the results from QFuture via
379 QFuture::takeResult() before trying to do the conversion. Use
380 QFuture::result() or QFuture::takeResult() methods explicitly,
381 where you need to convert \c QFuture<T> to \c T.
382
383 The implicit conversion from \c QFuture<T> to \c QFuture<void> has
384 been also disabled. If you really intend to do the conversion, use the
385 explicit \c {QFuture<void>(const QFuture<T> &)} constructor:
386
387 \code
388 QFuture<int> future = ...
389 QFuture<void> voidFuture = QFuture<void>(future);
390 \endcode
391
392 \section3 Equality operators
393
394 The equality operators of QFuture have been removed. They were comparing
395 the underlying d-pointers instead of comparing the results, which is not
396 what users might expect. If you need to compare QFuture objects, use
397 \c QFuture::result() or \c QFuture::takeResult() methods. For example:
398
399 \code
400 QFuture<int> future1 = ...;
401 QFuture<int> future2 = ...;
402 if (future1.result() == future2.result())
403 // ...
404 \endcode
405
406 \section2 Behavioral Changes to QFuture and QFutureWatcher
407
408 In Qt 6, there were some improvements to QFuture and QFutureWatcher which
409 caused the following behavioral changes:
410
411 \list
412
413 \li After pausing QFuture or QFutureWatcher (by calling \c pause() or
414 \c setPaused(true)), QFutureWatcher will not immediately stop delivering
415 progress and result ready signals. At the moment of pausing there may be
416 still computations that are in progress and cannot be stopped. Signals
417 for such computations may be still delivered after pause, instead of being
418 postponed and reported only after next resume. To get notified when pause
419 actually took effect, QFutureWatcher::suspended() signal can be used. In
420 addition, there are new \c isSuspending() and \c isSuspended() methods,
421 to check if the QFuture is in the process of suspending or it's already in
422 the suspended state. Note that for consistency reasons, for both QFuture
423 and QFutureWatcher the pause-related APIs were deprecated and replaced by
424 similar methods having "suspend" in the name instead.
425
426 \li QFuture::waitForFinished() will now wait until QFuture is actually in
427 the finished state, instead of exiting as soon as it is not in the running
428 state. This prevents \c waitForFinished() from exiting immediately, if at
429 the moment of calling it the future is not started yet. The same applies to
430 QFutureWatcher::waitForFinished(). This change won't affect the behavior of
431 code that was using QFuture with QtConcurrent. Only the code that was using
432 it with the undocumented \c QFutureInterface may be affected.
433
434 \li QFutureWatcher::isFinished() now reflects the finished-state of the
435 QFuture rather than returning false until QFutureWatcher::finished() has
436 been emitted.
437
438 \endlist
439
440 \section2 The QPromise class
441
442 In Qt 6, the new QPromise class should be used instead of unofficial
443 QFutureInterface as a "setter" counterpart of QFuture.
444
445 \section1 IO Classes
446
447 \section2 The QProcess class
448
449 In Qt 6, the QProcess::start() overload that interprets a single command string
450 by splitting it into program name and arguments is renamed to QProcess::startCommand().
451 However, a QProcess::start() overload that takes a single string, as well as a QStringList
452 for arguments exists. Since the QStringList parameter defaults to the empty list, existing
453 code only passing a string will still compile, but will fail to execute the process if it
454 is a complete command string that includes arguments.
455
456 Qt 5.15 introduced deprecation warnings for the respective overload to make it easy to
457 discover and update existing code:
458
459 \code
460 QProcess process;
461
462 // compiles with warnings in 5.15, compiles but fails with Qt 6
463 process.start("dir \"My Documents\"");
464
465 // works with both Qt 5 and Qt 6; also see QProcess::splitCommand()
466 process.start("dir", QStringList({"My Documents"});
467
468 // works with Qt 6
469 process.startCommand("dir \"My Documents\"");
470 \endcode
471
472 QProcess::pid() and the Q_PID type have been removed; use QProcess::processId() instead to
473 get the native process identifier. Code using native Win32 APIs to access the data in the
474 Q_PID as a Win32 \c{PROCESS_INFORMATION} struct is no longer supported.
475
476 \section1 Meta-Type system
477
478 \section2 The QVariant class
479
480 \c QVariant has been rewritten to use \c QMetaType for all of its operations. This implies
481 behavior changes in a few methods:
482
483 \list
484
485 \li \c QVariant::isNull() now only returns \c true if the \c QVariant is empty or contains a
486 \c nullptr. In Qt 5, it also returned true for classes in qtbase which had an \c isNull method
487 themselves if that one returned true. Code relying on the old behavior needs to check whether
488 the contained value returns isNull – however such code is unlikely to occur in practice, as
489 \c isNull() is rarely the property one is interested in (compare \c QString::isEmpty() / \c isNull()
490 and \c QTime::isValid / \c isNull).
491
492 \li \c QVariant::operator== uses \c QMetaType::equals in Qt 6. Therefore, some graphical
493 types like \c QPixmap, \c QImage and \c QIcon will never compare equal. Moreover, floating
494 point numbers stored in \c QVariant are no longer compared with \c qFuzzyCompare, but instead
495 use exact comparisons.
496
497 \endlist
498
499 Furthermore, QVariant::operator<, QVariant::operator<=, QVariant::operator> and
500 QVariant::operator>= were removed, because different variants are not always orderable. This
501 also means that QVariant cannot be used anymore as a key in a QMap.
502
503 \section2 The QMetaType class
504
505 In Qt 6, registration of comparators, and QDebug and QDataStream streaming operators is
506 done automatically. Consequently, \c QMetaType::registerEqualsComparator(),
507 \c QMetaType::registerComparators(), \c qRegisterMetaTypeStreamOperators() and
508 \c QMetaType::registerDebugStreamOperator() do no longer exist. Calls to those methods
509 have to be removed when porting to Qt 6.
510
511 \section2 Type registration
512
513 Types used in \c Q_PROPERTY have their meta-type stored in the class' \c QMetaObject. This
514 requires the types to be complete when moc sees them, which can lead to compilation errors
515 in code that worked in Qt 5. There are three ways to fix this issue:
516
517 \list
518
519 \li Include the header which defines the type.
520 \li Instead of using an include, use the \c Q_MOC_INCLUDE macro. This helps if including the header
521 would cause a cyclic dependency, or when it would slow down compilation.
522 \li If the header is present in the cpp file which implements the class, it is also possible to include
523 the moc generated file there.
524
525 \endlist
526
527 \section1 Regular expression classes
528
529 \section2 The QRegularExpression class
530
531 In Qt 6, the \c QRegExp type has been retired to the Qt5Compat module
532 and all Qt APIs using it have been removed from other modules.
533 Client code which used it can be ported to use \l QRegularExpression
534 in its place. As \l QRegularExpression is present already in Qt 5,
535 this can be done and tested before migration to Qt 6.
536
537 \include corelib/port-from-qregexp.qdocinc porting-to-qregularexpression
538
539 \section2 The QRegExp class
540
541 In Qt6 \l QRegExp got removed from Qt Core. If your application cannot be
542 ported right now, \c QRegExp still exists in Qt5Compat to keep these
543 code-bases working. If you want to use \c QRegExp further, see
544 \l {Using the Qt5Compat module}.
545
546 \section1 QEvent and subclasses
547
548 The QEvent class defined a copy constructor and an assignment operator,
549 in spite of being a polymorphic class. Copying classes with virtual methods
550 can result in slicing when assigning objects from different classes to each
551 other. Since copying and assigning often happens implicilty, this could
552 lead to hard-to-debug problems.
553
554 In Qt 6, the copy constructor and assignment operator for QEvent subclasses
555 have been made protected to prevent implicit copying. If you need to copy
556 events, use the \l{QEvent::}{clone} method, which will return a heap-allocated
557 copy of the QEvent object. Make sure you delete the clone, perhaps using
558 std::unique_ptr, unless you post it (in which case Qt will delete it once it
559 has been delivered).
560
561 In your QEvent subclasses, override clone(), and declare the protected and
562 default-implemented copy constructor and assignment operator like this:
563
564 \code
565 class MyEvent : public QEvent
566 {
567 public:
568 // ...
569
570 MyEvent *clone() const override { return new MyEvent(*this); }
571
572 protected:
573 MyEvent(const MyEvent &other) = default;
574 MyEvent &operator=(const MyEvent &other) = default;
575 MyEvent(MyEvent &&) = delete;
576 MyEvent &operator=(MyEvent &&) = delete;
577 // member data
578 };
579 \endcode
580
581 Note that if your MyEvent class allocates memory (e.g. through a
582 pointer-to-implementation pattern), then you will have to implement
583 custom copy semantics.
584
585 \section1 Serialization classes
586
587 In Qt 6, QJsonDocument methods for converting it to/from Qt's legacy
588 JSON binary format were removed in favor of the standardized CBOR format.
589 Qt JSON types can be converted to Qt CBOR types, which can in turn be
590 serialized into the CBOR binary format and vice versa. See, for example,
591 \l QCborValue::fromJsonValue() and \l QCborValue::toJsonValue().
592
593 If you still need to use the binary JSON format, you can use the
594 replacements provided in the Qt5Compat module. They can be found in the
595 \l QBinaryJson namespace. See \l {Using the Qt5Compat module} to find out
596 how to use the module in your application.
597
598 \section1 Other classes
599
600 In Qt 5, QCoreApplication::quit() was equivalent to calling
601 \l{QCoreApplication::exit()}. This just exited the main event loop.
602
603 In Qt 6, the method will instead try to close all top-level windows by posting
604 a close event. The windows are free to cancel the shutdown process by
605 ignoring the event.
606
607 Call QCoreApplication::exit() to keep the non-conditional behavior.
608
609 QLibraryInfo::location() and QLibraryInfo::Location were deprecated due to inconsistent
610 naming. Use the new API QLibraryInfo::path() and QLibraryInfo::LibraryPath instead.
611
612 \section1 Qt State Machine Framework
613
614 \l {Qt State Machine} was moved into the Qt SCXML module (soon to be renamed to Qt
615 State Machines) and therefore it is no longer part of Qt Core. There were very few
616 cross dependencies inside Qt Core which ultimately led to this decision.
617
618 \section1 Using the Qt5Compat module
619
620 To use the \l {Qt 5 Core Compatibility APIs}{Qt5Compat} module, you need
621 to build with its headers in your include path and link against its library.
622 If you are using \l qmake, add the following to your \c .pro file:
623
624 \code
625 QT += core5compat
626 \endcode
627
628 If you build your application or library using \l {Build with CMake}{cmake},
629 add the following to your \c CMakeList.txt:
630 \code
631 PUBLIC_LIBRARIES
632 Qt::Core5Compat
633 \endcode
634*/