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.updatebecomesQtGui.qApp.processEventsandmaster.afterbecomesQTimer.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_())guiLoopusesQTimer.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