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Qt: Signals and slots Error: undefined reference to `vtable for

开发者 https://www.devze.com 2023-03-02 06:25 出处:网络
Following example from this link: http://developer.kde.org/documentation/books/kde-2.0-development/ch03lev1sec3.html

Following example from this link: http://developer.kde.org/documentation/books/kde-2.0-development/ch03lev1sec3.html

#include <QObject>
#include <QPushButton>
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

class MyWindow : public QWidget
{
    Q_OBJECT  // Enable slots and signals
    public:
        MyWindow();
    private slots:
        void slotButton1();
        void slotButton2();
        void slotButtons();
    private:
        QPushButton *button1;
        QPushButton *button2;
};

MyWindow :: MyWindow() : QWidget()
{
    // Create button1 and connect button1->clicked() to this->slotButton1()
    button1 = new QPushButton("Button1", this);
    button1->setGeometry(10,10,100,40);
    button1->show();
    connect(button1, SIGNAL(clicked()), this, SLOT(slotButton1()));

    // Create button2 and connect button2->clicked() to this->slotButton2()
    button2 = new QPushButton("Button2", this);
    button2->setGeometry(110,10,100,40);
    button2->show();
    connect(button2, SIGNAL(clicked()), this, SLOT(slotButton2()));

    // When any button is clicked, call this->slotButtons()
    connect(button1, SIGNAL(clicked()), this, SLOT(slotButtons()));
    connect(button2, SIGNAL(clicked()), this, SLOT(slotButtons()));
}

// This slot is called when button1 is clicked.
void MyWindow::slotButton1()
{
    cout << "Button1 was clicked" << endl;
}

// This slot is called when button2 is clicked
void MyWindow::slotButton2()
{
    cout << "Button2 was clicked" << endl;
}

// This slot is called when any of the buttons were clicked
void MyWindow::slotButtons()
{
    cout << "A button was clicked" << endl;
}

int main ()
{
    MyWindow a;
}

results in:

    [13:14:34 Mon May 02] ~/junkPrograms/src/nonsense  $make
g++ -c -m64 -pipe -O2 -Wall -W -D_REENTRANT -DQT_NO_DEBUG -DQT_GUI_LIB -DQT_CORE_LIB -DQT_SHARED -I/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/mkspecs/linux-g++-64 -I. -I/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/include/QtCore -I/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/include/QtGui -I/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/include -I. -I. -o signalsSlots.o signalsSlots.cpp
g++ -m64 -Wl,-O1 -Wl,-rpath,开发者_Python百科/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/lib -o nonsense signalsSlots.o    -L/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/lib -lQtGui -L/opt/qtsdk-2010.05/qt/lib -L/usr/X11R6/lib64 -lQtCore -lpthread
signalsSlots.o: In function `MyWindow::MyWindow()':
signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x1a2): undefined reference to `vtable for MyWindow'
signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x1aa): undefined reference to `vtable for MyWindow'
signalsSlots.o: In function `MyWindow::MyWindow()':
signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x3e2): undefined reference to `vtable for MyWindow'
signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x3ea): undefined reference to `vtable for MyWindow'
signalsSlots.o: In function `main':
signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x614): undefined reference to `vtable for MyWindow'
signalsSlots.o:signalsSlots.cpp:(.text+0x61d): more undefined references to `vtable for MyWindow' follow
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
make: *** [nonsense] Error 1

vtable is for virtual functions, AFAIK, what's the reason of error here?


It looks like moc doesn't generate code for your QObject because you declare it in the .cpp file. The easiest way to fix that is to move the declaration of MyWindow to a header, and add the header to the HEADERS list, in the .pro file:

HEADERS += yourheader.h 

Then rerun qmake.

(Please note that the KDE 2.0 book you look at is vastly outdated)


Maybe too late but... Had the same issue and fighted for a while to find where it comes from.

Right click on your project and select “Run qmake” to for a new build of MOC classes. It usually does run automatically...

The moc compiler generates the stubs and calls in moc_xxxx.cpp, and generates the vtable stuff


Just Change your Main() as follows:

#include <QtGui/QApplication>

int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
    QApplication a(argc, argv);
    MyWindow w;

    w.show();

    return a.exec();
}


Based on andref comment just above, when everything is in one cpp file like stuff.cpp, you need to add at the end of the file:

#include "moc_stuff.cpp"

(this is with Qt 4.7.0)


This issue may be caused by some of the following reasons. I have stumbled on all of them from time to time.


Your class header may be missing the Q_OBJECT macro. Add the macro to the header as already noted by other answers.

class MyWidg : public QWidget
{
    Q_OBJECT

Your class header may not be parsed by the moc. Add the header file in the HEADERS definitions of your .pro (or .pri) project file.

HEADERS += file.h

If none of the above is true, then you probably need to run qmake again to make sure moc parses the header again, just in case the Q_OBJECT macro was added in the header after the qmake was run. Just run qmake again.

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