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Signals and slots

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This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Alexdw (talk | contribs) at 22:23, 6 December 2007 (New QT version). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Signals and slots is a language construct introduced in Qt, which makes it easy to implement the Observer pattern while avoiding boilerplate code. The concept is that controls (also known as widgets) can send signals containing event information (e.g. the text "toto" was selected, the scrollbar has been adjusted to value 37) which can be received by other controls using special functions known as slots. The signal/slot system fits well with the way Graphical User Interfaces are designed. Similarly, the signal/slot system can be used for asynchronous I/O (including sockets, pipes, serial devices, etc.) event notification or to associate timeout events with appropriate object instances and methods or functions. A signal to slot connection is the equivalent of the Design Pattern Observer. No registration/deregistration/invocation code must be written, because QTs "Meta Object Compiler", moc, automatically generates the needed infrastructure.

There are some implementations of signal/slot systems based on C++ templates, which don't require the extra Meta Object Compiler, as used by Qt, such as libsigc++, sigslot, and boost.signals. The C# language also supports a similar construct although with a different terminology and syntax: events play the role of signals, and delegates are the slots. Additionally, a delegate can be a local variable, much like a function pointer, while a slot in Qt must be a class member declared as such.

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