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10 Tips to Make Your QML Code Faster and More Maintainable

Wednesday, 23 October 2024 | KDAB on Qt

In recent years, a lot has been happening to improve performance, maintainability and tooling of QML. Some of those improvements can only take full effect when your code follows modern best practices. Here are 10 things you can do in order to modernize your QML code and take full advantage of QML’s capabilities.

1. Use qt_add_qml_module CMake API

Qt6 introduced a new CMake API to create QML modules. Not only is this more convenient than what previously had to be done manually, but it is also a prerequisite for being able to exploit most of the following tips.

By using the qt_add_qml_module, your QML code is automatically processed by qmlcachegen, which not only creates QML byte code ahead of time, but also converts parts of your QML code to C++ code, improving performance. How much of your code can be compiled to C++ depends on the quality of the input code. The following tips are all about improving your code in that regard.

add_executable(myapp main.cpp)

qt_add_qml_module(myapp
 URI "org.kde.myapp"
 QML_FILES Main.qml
)

2. Use declarative type registration

When creating custom types in C++ and registering them with qmlRegisterType and friends, they are not visible to the tooling at the compile time. qmlcachegen doesn’t know which types exist and which properties they have. Hence, it cannot translate to C++ the code that’s using them. Your experience with the QML Language Server will also suffer since it cannot autocomplete types and property names.

To fix this, your types should be registered declaratively using the QML_ELEMENT (and its friends, QML_NAMED_ELEMENT, QML_SINGLETON, etc) macros.

qmlRegisterType("org.kde.myapp", 1, 0, "MyThing");

becomes

class MyThing : public QObject
{
    Q_OBJECT
    QML_ELEMENT
};

The URL and version information are inferred from the qt_add_qml_module call.

3. Declare module dependencies

Sometimes your QML module depends on other modules. This can be due to importing it in the QML code, or more subtly by using types from another module in your QML-exposed C++ code. In the latter case, the dependency needs to be declared in the qt_add_qml_module call.

For example, exposing a QAbstractItemModel subclass to QML adds a dependency to the QtCore (that’s where QAbstractItemModel is registered) to your module. This does not only happen when subclassing a type but also when using it as a parameter type in properties or invokables.

Another example is creating a custom QQuickItem-derived type in C++, which adds a dependency on the Qt Quick module.

To fix this, add the DEPENDENCIES declaration to qt_add_qml_module:

qt_add_qml_module(myapp
 URI "org.kde.myapp"
 QML_FILES Main.qml
 DEPENDENCIES QtCore
)

4. Qualify property types fully

MOC needs types in C++ property definitions to be fully qualified, i.e. include the full namespace, even when inside that namespace. Not doing this will cause issues for the QML tooling.

namespace MyApp {

class MyHelper : public QObject {
    Q_OBJECT
};

class MyThing : public QObject {
    Q_OBJECT
    QML_ELEMENT
    Q_PROPERTY(MyHelper *helper READ helper CONSTANT) // bad
    Q_PROPERTY(MyApp::MyHelper *helper READ helper CONSTANT) // good
    ...
};
}

5. Use types

In order for qmlcachegen to generate efficient code for your bindings, it needs to know the type for properties. Avoid using ‘property var’ wherever possible and use concrete types. This may be built-in types like int, double, or string, or any declaratively-defined custom type. Sometimes you want to be able to use a type as a property type in QML but don’t want the type to be creatable from QML directly. For this, you can register them using the QML_UNCREATABLE macro.

property var size: 10 // bad
property int size: 10 // good

property var thing // bad
property MyThing thing // good

6. Avoid parent and other generic properties

qmlcachegen can only work with the property types it knows at compile time. It cannot make any assumptions about which concrete subtype a property will hold at runtime. This means that, if a property is defined with type Item, it can only compile bindings using properties defined on Item, not any of its subtypes. This is particularly relevant for properties like ‘parent’ or ‘contentItem’. For this reason, avoid using properties like these to look up items when not using properties defined on Item (properties like width, height, or visible are okay) and use look-ups via IDs instead.

Item {
    id: thing

    property int size: 10

    Rectangle {
        width: parent.size // bad, Item has no 'size' property
        height: thing.height // good, lookup via id

        color: parent.enabled ? "red" : "black" // good, Item has 'enabled' property
    }
}

7. Annotate function parameters with types

In order for qmlcachegen to compile JavaScript functions, it needs to know the function’s parameter and return type. For that, you need to add type annotations to the function:

function calculateArea(width: double, height: double) : double {
    return width * height
}

When using signal handlers with parameters, you should explicitly specify the signal parameters by supplying a JS function or an arrow expression:

MouseArea {
    onClicked: event => console.log("clicked at", event.x, event.y)
}

Not only does this make qmlcachegen happy, it also makes your code far more readable.

8. Use qualified property lookup

QML allows you to access properties from objects several times up in the parent hierarchy without explicitly specifying which object is being referenced. This is called an unqualified property look-up and generally considered bad practice since it leads to brittle and hard to reason about code. qmlcachegen also cannot properly reason about such code. So, it cannot properly compile it. You should only use qualified property lookups

Item {
    id: root
    property int size: 10

    Rectangle {
        width: size // bad, unqualified lookup
        height: root.size // good, qualified lookup
    }
}

Another area that needs attention is accessing model roles in a delegate. Views like ListView inject their model data as properties into the context of the delegate where they can be accessed with expressions like ‘foo’, ‘model.foo’, or ‘modelData.foo’. This way, qmlcachegen has no information about the types of the roles and cannot do its job properly. To fix this, you should use required properties to fetch the model data:

ListView {
    model: MyModel

    delegate: ItemDelegate {
        text: name // bad, lookup from context
        icon.name: model.iconName // more readable, but still bad

        required property bool active // good, using required property
        checked: active
    }
}

9. Use pragma ComponentBehavior: Bound

When defining components, either explicitly via Component {} or implicitly when using delegates, it is common to want to refer to IDs outside of that component, and this generally works. However, theoretically any component can be used outside of the context it is defined in and, when doing that, IDs might refer to another object entirely. For this reason, qmlcachegen cannot properly compile such code.

To address this, we need to learn about pragma ComponentBehavior. Pragmas are file-wide switches that influence the behavior of QML. By specifying pragma ComponentBehavior: Bound at the top of the QML file, we can bind any components defined in this file to their surroundings. As a result, we cannot use the component in another place anymore but can now safely access IDs outside of it.

pragma ComponentBehavior: Bound

import QtQuick

Item {
    id: root

    property int delegateHeight: 10

    ListView {
        model: MyModel

        delegate: Rectangle {
            height: root.delegateHeight // good with ComponentBehavior: Bound, bad otherwise
        }
    }
}

A side effect of this is that accessing model data now must happen using required properties, as described in the previous point. Learn more about ComponentBehavior here.

10. Know your tools

A lot of these pitfalls are not obvious, even to seasoned QML programmers, especially when working with existing codebases. Fortunately, qmllint helps you find most of these issues and avoids introducing them. By using the QML Language Server, you can incorporate qmllint directly into your preferred IDE/editor such as Kate or Visual Studio Code.

While qmlcachegen can help boost your QML application’s performance, there are performance problems it cannot help with, such as scenes that are too complex, slow C++ code, or inefficient rendering. To investigate such problems, tools like the QML profiler, Hotspot for CPU profiling, Heaptrack for memory profiling, and GammaRay for analyzing QML scenes are very helpful.

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