How to use QDataStream::readBytes()

Kyle Strand picture Kyle Strand · Apr 14, 2015 · Viewed 8.3k times · Source

According to the documentation for readBytes() (in Qt 5.4's QDataStream), I would expect the following code to copy the input_array into newly allocated memory and point raw at the copy:

QByteArray input_array{"\x01\x02\x03\x04qwertyuiop"};
QDataStream unmarshaller{&input_array, QIODevice::ReadOnly};

char* raw;
uint length;
unmarshaller.readBytes(raw, length);

qDebug() << "raw null? " << (raw == nullptr) << " ; length = " << length << endl;

...but the code prints raw null? true ; length = 0, indicating that no bytes were read from the input array.

Why is this? What am I misunderstanding about readBytes()?

Answer

hank picture hank · Apr 15, 2015

The documentation does not describe this clearly enough, but QDataStream::readBytes expects the data to be in a certain format: quint32 part which is the data length and then the data itself.

So to read data using QDataStream::readBytes you should first write it using QDataStream::writeBytes or write it any other way using the proper format.

An example:

QByteArray raw_input = "\x01\x02\x03\x04qwertyuiop";

QByteArray ba;

QDataStream writer(&ba, QIODevice::WriteOnly);
writer.writeBytes(raw_input.constData(), raw_input.length());

QDataStream reader(ba);

char* raw;
uint length;
reader.readBytes(raw, length);

qDebug() << "raw null? " << (raw == NULL) << " ; length = " << length << endl;

Also you can use QDataStream::readRawData and QDataStream::writeRawData to read and write arbitrary data.