Qt Quick 2 Oscilloscope Example

Example of a hybrid C++ and QML application.

The Qt Quick 2 oscilloscope example shows how to combine C++ and QML in an application, as well as showing data that changes realtime.

The interesting thing about this example is combining C++ and QML, so we'll concentrate on that and skip explaining the basic functionality - for more detailed QML example documentation, see Qt Quick 2 Scatter Example.

Running the Example

To run the example from Qt Creator, open the Welcome mode and select the example from Examples. For more information, visit Building and Running an Example.

Data Source in C++

The item model based proxies are good for simple and/or static graphs, but to achieve best performance when displaying data changing in realtime, the basic proxies should be used. Those are not supported in QML, as the data items they store are not QObjects and cannot therefore be directly manipulated from QML code. To overcome this limitation, we implement a simple DataSource class in C++ to populate the data proxy of the series.

The DataSource class provides three methods that can be called from QML:

 public Q_SLOTS:
 void generateData(int cacheCount, int rowCount, int columnCount,
                   float xMin, float xMax, float yMin, float yMax, float zMin, float zMax);

 void update(QSurface3DSeries *series);

The first method, generateData(), creates a cache of simulated oscilloscope data for us to display. The data is cached in a format accepted by QSurfaceDataProxy:

 void DataSource::generateData(int cacheCount, int rowCount, int columnCount,
                               float xMin, float xMax, float yMin, float yMax,
                               float zMin, float zMax)
 {
     if (!cacheCount || !rowCount || !columnCount)
         return;

     clearData();
     // Re-create the cache array
     m_data.resize(cacheCount);
     for (int i(0); i < cacheCount; i++) {
         QSurfaceDataArray &array = m_data[i];
         array.reserve(rowCount);
         for (int j(0); j < rowCount; j++)
             array.append(new QSurfaceDataRow(columnCount));
     }

     float xRange = xMax - xMin;
     float yRange = yMax - yMin;
     float zRange = zMax - zMin;
     int cacheIndexStep = columnCount / cacheCount;
     float cacheStep = float(cacheIndexStep) * xRange / float(columnCount);

     // Populate caches
     for (int i(0); i < cacheCount; i++) {
         QSurfaceDataArray &cache = m_data[i];
         float cacheXAdjustment = cacheStep * i;
         float cacheIndexAdjustment = cacheIndexStep * i;
         for (int j(0); j < rowCount; j++) {
             QSurfaceDataRow &row = *(cache[j]);
             float rowMod = (float(j)) / float(rowCount);
             float yRangeMod = yRange * rowMod;
             float zRangeMod = zRange * rowMod;
             float z = zRangeMod + zMin;
             qreal rowColWaveAngleMul = M_PI * M_PI * rowMod;
             float rowColWaveMul = yRangeMod * 0.2f;
             for (int k(0); k < columnCount; k++) {
                 float colMod = (float(k)) / float(columnCount);
                 float xRangeMod = xRange * colMod;
                 float x = xRangeMod + xMin + cacheXAdjustment;
                 float colWave = float(qSin((2.0 * M_PI * colMod) - (1.0 / 2.0 * M_PI)) + 1.0);
                 float y = (colWave * ((float(qSin(rowColWaveAngleMul * colMod) + 1.0))))
                         * rowColWaveMul
                         + QRandomGenerator::global()->bounded(0.15f) * yRangeMod;

                 int index = k + cacheIndexAdjustment;
                 if (index >= columnCount) {
                     // Wrap over
                     index -= columnCount;
                     x -= xRange;
                 }
                 row[index] = QVector3D(x, y, z);
             }
         }
     }
 }

The second method, update(), copies one set of the cached data into another array, which we set to the data proxy of the series by calling QSurfaceDataProxy::resetArray(). We reuse the same array if the array dimensions have not changed to minimize overhead:

 void DataSource::update(QSurface3DSeries *series)
 {
     if (series && m_data.size()) {
         // Each iteration uses data from a different cached array
         m_index++;
         if (m_index > m_data.count() - 1)
             m_index = 0;

         QSurfaceDataArray array = m_data.at(m_index);
         int newRowCount = array.size();
         int newColumnCount = array.at(0)->size();

         // If the first time or the dimensions of the cache array have changed,
         // reconstruct the reset array
         if (!m_resetArray || series->dataProxy()->rowCount() != newRowCount
                 || series->dataProxy()->columnCount() != newColumnCount) {
             m_resetArray = new QSurfaceDataArray();
             m_resetArray->reserve(newRowCount);
             for (int i(0); i < newRowCount; i++)
                 m_resetArray->append(new QSurfaceDataRow(newColumnCount));
         }

         // Copy items from our cache to the reset array
         for (int i(0); i < newRowCount; i++) {
             const QSurfaceDataRow &sourceRow = *(array.at(i));
             QSurfaceDataRow &row = *(*m_resetArray)[i];
             for (int j(0); j < newColumnCount; j++)
                 row[j].setPosition(sourceRow.at(j).position());
         }

         // Notify the proxy that data has changed
         series->dataProxy()->resetArray(m_resetArray);
     }
 }

Note: Even though we are operating on the array pointer we have previously set to the proxy we still need to call QSurfaceDataProxy::resetArray() after changing the data in it to prompt the graph to render the data.

To be able to access the DataSource methods from QML, we need to expose it. We do this by defining a context property in application main:

 DataSource dataSource;
 viewer.rootContext()->setContextProperty("dataSource", &dataSource);

To make it possible to use QSurface3DSeries pointers as parameters on the DataSource class methods on all environments and builds, we need to make sure the meta type is registered:

 Q_DECLARE_METATYPE(QSurface3DSeries *)
 ...
 qRegisterMetaType<QSurface3DSeries *>();

QML

In the QML codes, we define a Surface3D graph normally and give it a Surface3DSeries:

 Surface3DSeries {
     id: surfaceSeries
     drawMode: Surface3DSeries.DrawSurface;
     flatShadingEnabled: false;
     meshSmooth: true
     itemLabelFormat: "@xLabel, @zLabel: @yLabel"
     itemLabelVisible: false

     onItemLabelChanged: {
         if (surfaceSeries.selectedPoint === surfaceSeries.invalidSelectionPosition)
             selectionText.text = "No selection"
         else
             selectionText.text = surfaceSeries.itemLabel
     }
 }

One interesting detail is that we don't specify a proxy for the Surface3DSeries we attach to the graph. This makes the series to utilize the default QSurfaceDataProxy.

We also hide the item label with itemLabelVisible, since we want to display the selected item information in a Text element instead of a floating label above the selection pointer. This is done because the selection pointer moves around a lot as the data changes, which makes the regular selection label difficult to read.

We initialize the DataSource cache when the graph is complete by calling a helper function generateData(), which calls the method with the same name on the DataSource:

 Component.onCompleted: mainView.generateData()
     ...
 function generateData() {
     dataSource.generateData(mainView.sampleCache, mainView.sampleRows,
                             mainView.sampleColumns, surfaceGraph.axisX.min,
                             surfaceGraph.axisX.max, surfaceGraph.axisY.min,
                             surfaceGraph.axisY.max, surfaceGraph.axisZ.min,
                             surfaceGraph.axisZ.max)
 }

To trigger the updates in data, we define a Timer item which calls the update() method on the DataSource at requested intervals. The label update is also triggered on each cycle:

 Timer {
     id: refreshTimer
     interval: 1000 / frequencySlider.value
     running: true
     repeat: true
     onTriggered: dataSource.update(surfaceSeries)
 }

Enabling Direct Rendering

Since this application potentially deals with a lot of rapidly changing data, we use direct rendering mode for performance. To enable antialiasing in this mode the surface format of the application window needs to be changed, as the default format used by QQuickView doesn't support antialiasing. We use the utility function provided by Qt Data Visualization to change the surface format in main.cpp:

 viewer.setFormat(QtDataVisualization::qDefaultSurfaceFormat());
 ...
 #include <QtDataVisualization/qutils.h>

On the QML side, direct rendering mode is enabled via renderingMode property:

 renderingMode: AbstractGraph3D.RenderDirectToBackground

Example project @ code.qt.io