I have a QTimer
connected to a TimerHandler
function. The TimerHandler
should do my SendKeys
function that I declared in the public section of my header. If I manually type in the text for the SendKeys
function it gives an correct output. But if I pass the text from a pre-defined LPSTR
it outputs garbage. Here is my code:
MyProject.h
#ifndef MYPROJECT_H
#define MYPROJECT_H
#include <QtGui/QMainWindow>
#include "ui_myproject.h"
#include <qtimer.h>
#include <qmessagebox.h>
#include <Windows.h>
class MyProject : public QMainWindow
{
Q_OBJECT
public:
MyClass(QWidget *parent = 0, Qt::WFlags flags = 0);
Ui::MyProjectClass ui;
QTimer* SpamTimer;
void SendText(char* message, int size)
{
int lc=0;
do{
keybd_event(VkKeyScan(message[lc]),0,KEYEVENTF_EXTENDEDKEY,0);
keybd_event(VkKeyScan(message[lc]),0,KEYEVENTF_KEYUP,0);
lc=lc+1;
}while(lc<size);
keybd_event(VK_RETURN,0,KEYEVENTF_EXTENDEDKEY,0);
keybd_event(VK_RETURN,0,KEYEVENTF_KEYUP,0);
}
public slots:
void StartBTNClick();
void StopBTNClick();
void TimerHandler();
};
#endif // MYPROJECT_H
MyProject.cpp
#include "MyProject.h"
LPSTR txtMessage; // Message for SendKeys function.
int buffer;
bool TimerEnabled = 0;
MyClass::MainWindow(QWidget *parent, Qt::WFlags flags) // Intializing MainWindow
: QMainWindow(parent, flags)
{
ui.setupUi(this);
statusBar()->showMessage("Status: Idle.");
connect(ui.StartBTN, SIGNAL(clicked()), this, SLOT(StartBTNClick()));
connect(ui.StopBTN, SIGNAL(clicked()), this, SLOT(StopBTNClick()));
}
void MyClass::StartBTNClick() // Starts the timer.
{
int delay; // delay for QTimer
bool ok;
std::string convertme;
QString TextMSG = ui.TextBox->text(); // Get text from 'line edit' for txtMessage.
QString TimeMSG = ui.TimeBox->text(); // Get text from 2nd 'line edit' for delay.
convertme = TextMSG.toStdString();
txtMessage = const_cast<char*> (convertme.c_str()); // converted QString to LPSTR.
buffer = strlen(txtMessage);
delay = TimeMSG.toInt(&ok, 10); // converted QString to int.
if (delay > 0)
{
QtTimer = new QTimer(this);
connect(QtTimer, SIGNAL(timeout()), this, SLOT(TimerHandler()));
TimerEnabled = 1;
QtTimer->start(delay);
statusBar()->showMessage("Status: Running.");
}
else if (delay < 0)
{
QMessageBox::warning(this, "Warning!", "Delay can't be \"0\" or lower than \"0\"!");
}
else
{
QMessageBox::warning(this, "Warning!", "Delay was not specified properly.");
}
}
void MyClass::StopBTNClick() // Stops the timer.
{
if (TimerEnabled == 1)
{
QtTimer->stop();
disconnect(QtTimer, SIGNAL(timeout()), this, SLOT(TimerHandler()));
TimerEnabled = 0;
statusBar()->showMessage("Status: Idle.");
}
}
void MyClass::TimerHandler() // Timer handles the SendKeys function
{
SendText(txtMessage, buffer);
}
This makes my timer output garbage instead the text inside txtMessage
.
If I use
SendText("test message", strlen("test message"));
instead, it outputs the message correctly. Is there something wrong with my code?
I tried declaring LPSTR txtMessage
inside my class in the public section at MyProject.h
but this also didn't work.
Make txtMessage
a string
object (std::string
or QString
, since you're using Qt), not a pointer. Get the pointer from that object right before making the call to SendText
or, even easier, just make SendText
take a string object instead of a pointer.
void SendText(const QString& str)
{
const char* message = str.c_str();
// whatever else you want to do
}
The problem is that you're storing a pointer to data in a temporary object (convertme
). This object goes out of scope and is destroyed and the memory gets rewritten. The reason it works with `"test message" is that string literals are stored differently. You need to keep the message you're trying to store in memory the whole time.