问题
I have the following code which will start after clicking the 'Start' button in PyQt:
def Start(self):
import time
import os
import RPi.GPIO as GPIO
import datetime
GPIO.setmode(GPIO.BCM)
DEBUG = 1
os.system('clear')
# SPI port on GPIO
SPICLK = 18
SPIMISO = 23
SPICS = 25
# set up the SPI interface pins
GPIO.setup(SPIMISO, GPIO.IN)
GPIO.setup(SPICLK, GPIO.OUT)
GPIO.setup(SPICS, GPIO.OUT)
GPIO.output(SPICS, True)
GPIO.output(SPICS, False) # bring CS low
while True:
adcout = 0
read_adc = 0
#s=time.clock()
for i in range(25):
GPIO.output(SPICLK, True)
GPIO.output(SPICLK, False)
adcout <<= 1
if (GPIO.input(SPIMISO)==1):
adcout |= 0x1
time.sleep(0.085)
if (GPIO.input(SPIMISO)==0):
read_adc = adcout
millivolts = read_adc * ( 2500.0 /(pow(2,22)))
read_adc = "%d" % read_adc
millivolts = "%d" % millivolts
if DEBUG:
print millivolts, "mV (ADC)"
The above program is for ADC reading and it will start after clicking the pushbutton called 'Start' as : self.pushButton.clicked.connect( self.Start)
And I have another pushButton_2
called 'Stop' and by clicking this the above process should stop.Please suggest, so I can able to do that.
回答1:
This question is useful: tkinter loop and serial write It could be copied over with two changes:
master.update
becomesQtGui.qApp.processEvents
andmaster.after
becomesQTimer.singleShot
.Here is a sketch of how to do what you ask for with guiLoop:
from guiLoop import guiLoop, stopLoop # ... means fill in your code class ...: started = False def Start(self): if not self.started: # you can also use threads here, see the first link self.started = self.StartLoop() def Stop(self): if self.started: stopLoop(self.started) self.started = False @guiLoop def StartLoop(self): # This is your Start function # ... while True: # ... yield 0.085 # time.sleep(0.085) equivalent # ...
Since I do not know what your code look like, here is a working example using PyQT4 and guiLoop:
from PyQt4 import QtGui import sys from guiLoop import guiLoop # https://gist.github.com/niccokunzmann/8673951 @guiLoop def led_blink(argument): while 1: print("LED on " + argument) yield 0.5 # time to wait print("LED off " + argument) yield 0.5 app = QtGui.QApplication(sys.argv) w = QtGui.QWidget() w.resize(250, 150) w.move(300, 300) w.setWindowTitle('Simple') w.show() led_blink(w, 'shiny!') sys.exit(app.exec_())
guiLoop
usesQTimer.singleShot(time, function)
to make the loop continue.You can also stop the loop with
stopLoop()
of guiLoop.
回答2:
There is no need to do anything other than what I suggested in your other question on this topic: just use processEvents
. As long as you can call it frequently enough (but not too frequently), it should do exactly what you want. Using your second example, the following works fine for me:
def Start(self):
if not self.started:
self.started = True
self.StartLoop()
def Stop(self):
if self.started:
self.started = False
def StartLoop(self):
DEBUG = 1
while self.started:
print "LED on "
time.sleep(0.05)
print "LED off "
time.sleep(0.085)
QtGui.qApp.processEvents()
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/23057031/how-to-quit-the-program-in-while-loop-using-push-button-in-pyqt