Reputation: 2667
I recently decided to write my first app with Python and PySide. But I have a problem and hope you guys can help.
Python keeps raising exceptions that the "Internal C++ Object" is deleted. From my limited experience with Python I figure that my object is going out of scope and being deleted by Python's Garbage Collector.
So how would I go about designing a multi-page application in Python with PySide. And being able to keep my QWidgets so I can show the page again.
Thanks for your time.
Update (Code)
instancing = None
def instance():
global instancing
if instancing == None:
instancing = WPZKernel()
return instancing
class WPZKernel:
win = None
mainscreen = None
def mainwindow(self):
if self.win == None:
self.win = GMKMainWindow(self)
return self.win
def main_panel(self):
if self.mainscreen == None:
self.mainscreen = GMKMainScreen(self.mainwindow())
return self.mainscreen
I would then normally access the mainpanel by calling:
import kernel
kernel.instance().main_panel()
So am I going about this the wrong way?
Upvotes: 29
Views: 43162
Reputation: 2667
After some searching and hair pulling, I found the solution. I was showing all the pages by setting them as the central widget, and when reading the QMainWindow documentation I found that my widget basically gets deleted by qt as stated:
Note: QMainWindow takes ownership of the widget pointer and deletes it at the appropriate time.
So to develop a Multi-Page application rather take a look at QStackedWidget.
Upvotes: 24
Reputation: 25207
See here: PySide Pitfalls.
If a QObject falls out of scope in Python, it will get deleted. You have to take care of keeping a reference to the object:
- Store it as an attribute of an object you keep around, e.g. self.window = QMainWindow()
- Pass a parent QObject to the object’s constructor, so it gets owned by the parent
Upvotes: 17