I have a QML-based app that loads a main.qml
file from the file system like this:
myEngine->load("main.qml");
This works fine, but I'd like to "reload" the engine in case the main.qml was replaced with a newer version.
What I tried so far was calling load()
again, assuming that the engine will automatically reset itself like in other Qt classes.
Unfortunately this is not the case. If I call the method again, another window will appear with the contents of the updated qml file, while the original window stays open and continues to display the old qml file.
To fix this I tried to call load(QUrl())
, followed by clearComponentCache()
and a final load call for the new file. This results in the same effect.
Any ideas how I can "properly" reload a QML engine while the application is running?
I would try storing myEngine
as a pointer on the heap, and deleting it after calling quit(). Then you can reconstruct it to get the new version of the QML file.
If you don't want to do this for some reason (e.g. because you want to keep the window around or whatever), you might try using a Loader
and loading the QML file that way. Your main.qml
would then look something like this:
import QtQuick 2.0
Loader {
source: "changing.qml"
}
Whenever you detect that changing.qml
has changed, just toggle the active property of Loader
to trigger a reload of the file.