website/content/blog/qttimer.md

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2020-03-19 17:32:32 -04:00
---
title: "Qt Timers"
date: 2020-03-19T17:30:04-04:00
draft: false
2022-01-02 14:24:29 -05:00
tags: ["C++"]
2023-01-05 14:04:45 -05:00
medium_enabled: true
2020-03-19 17:32:32 -04:00
---
Qt has two great timers, one that repeats an action after a certain interval, and one that is meant for one-off operations. They call these `QTimer` and `QTimer::singleShot` respectively. This post is going to assume that we're working with a class named `Test` that inherits `QObject`.
Let us first look at the one that repeats. This code needs to be inside a class that inherits `QObject`.
```c++
void Test::callbackRepeat(void) {
// Code that executes when the timer times out
}
// ......
int interval = 1000; // Units: milliseconds
QTimer* timer = new QTimer(this);
timer->start(interval);
connect(timer, &QTimer::timeout, this, &Test::callbackRepeat);
```
Now for the one-off...
```c++
void Test::callback(void) {
// Code that executes when the timer times out
}
// ......
int timeout = 1000; // Units: milliseconds
QTimer::singleShot(timeout, this, &Test::callback)
```