SCXML Traffic Light (Dynamic, Widgets)
A widget-based application that uses a dynamically loaded state machine to implement a traffic light.
Traffic Light demonstrates how to connect to the active properties of a state in a dynamically loaded state machine.
The UI is created using Qt Widgets.
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.
Dynamically Loading the State Machine
We link against the Qt SCXML module by adding the following lines to the example's build files.
To .pro when using qmake:
QT += widgets scxml
To CMakeLists.txt when using cmake:
find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Core Gui Scxml Widgets) target_link_libraries(trafficlight-widgets-dynamic PRIVATE Qt6::Core Qt6::Gui Qt6::Scxml Qt6::Widgets )
We dynamically create the state machine in trafficlight-widgets-dynamic.cpp:
#include "../trafficlight-common/trafficlight.h" #include <QtWidgets/qapplication.h> #include <QtCore/qiodevice.h> #include <QtCore/qtextstream.h> using namespace Qt::Literals::StringLiterals; int main(int argc, char **argv) { QApplication app(argc, argv); QScxmlStateMachine *machine = QScxmlStateMachine::fromFile(u":statemachine.scxml"_s); if (!machine->parseErrors().isEmpty()) { QTextStream errs(stderr, QIODevice::WriteOnly); const auto errors = machine->parseErrors(); for (const QScxmlError &error : errors) { errs << error.toString(); } return -1; }
And then instantiate it:
TrafficLight widget(machine); widget.show(); machine->setParent(&widget); machine->start(); return app.exec(); }
Connecting to States
In the SCXML file, we specify states for each light: red, yellow, and green. In the <onentry>
element, we specify the event to send when entering the state and the delay in seconds before sending the event. In the <transition>
element, we specify the event that triggers the transition to the state specified by the target
attribute:
<state id="red"> <onentry> <send event="startGoingGreen" delay="3s"/> </onentry> <transition event="startGoingGreen" target="redGoingGreen"/> </state> <state id="yellow" initial="greenGoingRed"> <state id="redGoingGreen"> <onentry> <send event="goGreen" delay="1s"/> </onentry> <transition event="goGreen" target="green"/> </state> <state id="greenGoingRed"> <onentry> <send event="goRed" delay="1s"/> </onentry> <transition event="goRed" target="red"/> </state> </state> <state id="green"> <onentry> <send event="startGoingRed" delay="3s"/> </onentry> <transition event="startGoingRed" target="greenGoingRed"/> </state>
We connect to the states as follows:
machine->connectToState(u"red"_s, widget->redLight(), &LightWidget::switchLight); machine->connectToState(u"redGoingGreen"_s, widget->redLight(), &LightWidget::switchLight); machine->connectToState(u"yellow"_s, widget->yellowLight(), &LightWidget::switchLight); machine->connectToState(u"blinking"_s, widget->yellowLight(), &LightWidget::switchLight); machine->connectToState(u"green"_s, widget->greenLight(), &LightWidget::switchLight);
© 2024 The Qt Company Ltd. Documentation contributions included herein are the copyrights of their respective owners. The documentation provided herein is licensed under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License version 1.3 as published by the Free Software Foundation. Qt and respective logos are trademarks of The Qt Company Ltd. in Finland and/or other countries worldwide. All other trademarks are property of their respective owners.