Performance Tip Optimizing Iteration: Difference between revisions

From Qt Wiki
Jump to navigation Jump to search
(Decode HTML entity names)
(Remove non-functioning "toc" command)
Line 4: Line 4:
[[Category:HowTo]]
[[Category:HowTo]]
[[Category:Developing with Qt]]
[[Category:Developing with Qt]]
[toc align_right="yes" depth="2"]


= Performance Tip: Optimizing Iteration =
= Performance Tip: Optimizing Iteration =

Revision as of 12:26, 17 April 2015

This article may require cleanup to meet the Qt Wiki's quality standards. Reason: Auto-imported from ExpressionEngine.
Please improve this article if you can. Remove the {{cleanup}} tag and add this page to Updated pages list after it's clean.

Performance Tip: Optimizing Iteration

Here are two tips to help produce code that makes the most out of Qt internal performance.

Iterator selection

Qt allows you to use both Java-style and STL-style iterators to step through your structures. Your selection of iterator style has no performance impact, but your selection of iterator operator does.

QListIterator<int> i(list);
while (i.hasNext())
 process(i.next());

Java style iterator

QList<int>::iterator i;
for (i = list.begin(); i != list.end(); ++i)
 process('''i);

STL (standard template library) style iterator

When using STL-style iterators with a list containing complex items, execution is faster if you use the +i operator instead of the i+ operator. The i++ will force your loop to work on a copy of the item i.

Careful with foreach

Benchmarking Qt applications indicates there is always a performance penalty to using a foreach loop as opposed to a for loop with an iterator. However, you can greatly reduce the performance penalty if you use a const iterator in your foreach loop. This can often make the performance penalty negligible, though it is never zero.


foreach (const QString &i, list)
 process(i);

Additional reading

Iterating efficiently - Qt Labs blog post