I am pretty much a beginner when it comes to GUI programming. I am using QT in combination with python bindings (PyQT4).
What I am trying to do:
QThread to read from & write to a Serial Port with
pyserial.QThread. and receive serial data from the
QThread with a signal.I started my own test implementation based on this code (Link).
Prior to this I read the basics about QThreads and tried to understand  how they are intended to be used.
The following test code is what I have come up with. I m sorry, I tried to keep it minmal, 
but it is still 75 lines of code:
from PyQt4 import QtCore, QtGui
import time
import sys
class SerialData(QtCore.QObject):
    def __init__(self, message):
        super(SerialData, self).__init__()
        self.__m = message
    def getMsg(self):
        return self.__m
class SerialCon(QtCore.QObject):
    finished = QtCore.pyqtSignal()
    received = QtCore.pyqtSignal(SerialData)
    def init(self):
       super(SerialCon, self).__init__()
       # TODO setup serial connection:
       # setting up a timer to check periodically for new received serial data
       self.timer = QtCore.QTimer()
       self.timer.setInterval(400)
       self.timer.timeout.connect(self.readData)
       self.timer.start(200)
       # self.finished.emit()
    def readData(self):
       self.received.emit(SerialData("New serial data!"))
       print "-> serial.readLine() ..."
    @QtCore.pyqtSlot(SerialData)
    def writeData(self, data):
       print "-> serial.write(), ", data.getMsg()
class MyGui(QtGui.QWidget):
    serialWrite = QtCore.pyqtSignal(SerialData)
    def __init__(self):
       super(MyGui, self).__init__()
       self.initUI()
    def initUI(self):
       bSend = QtGui.QPushButton("Send",self)
       bSend.clicked.connect(self.sendData)
       self.show()
    @QtCore.pyqtSlot(SerialData)
    def updateData(self, data):
        print "Gui:", data.getMsg()
    def sendData(self, pressed):
       data = SerialData("Send me!")
       self.serialWrite.emit(data)
def usingMoveToThread():
    app = QtGui.QApplication(sys.argv)
    guui = MyGui()
    thread = QtCore.QThread()
    serialc = SerialCon()
    serialc.moveToThread(thread)
    # connecting signals to slots
    serialc.finished.connect(thread.quit)
    guui.serialWrite.connect(serialc.writeData)
    serialc.received.connect(guui.updateData)
    thread.started.connect(serialc.init)
    thread.finished.connect(app.exit)
    thread.start()
    sys.exit(app.exec_())
if __name__ == "__main__":
    usingMoveToThread()
My Problems:
In test code the signal emitted from the SerialCon object (which has
been moved to the QThread) seems to be not received by the
corresponding slot  (in MyGui, updateData)
Sooner or later the running test code always causes a Segmentation
fault (core dumped). Which makes me believe that I missed some
important bits.
What could cause this?
Maybe I m taking a completely wrong approach? - so if you have a better idea how to achieve this, I d be very grateful to hear about it!
Thanks a lot!
At first I was only focussing on the new way, how QThreads should be used since QT4 
(Link),
by creating a QObject, and then invoking moveToThread(), pretty much like in my first code sample (at least thats how I understood it).
However I just could not figure out, why I was not able to pass signals from the 
QThread to the main application.
As I really needed a fast solution to my problem, I desperately tried varius things. Here is some second code, that does seem to work the way I wanted:
from PyQt4 import QtCore, QtGui
import time
import sys
import math
class SerialCon(QtCore.QThread):
    received = QtCore.pyqtSignal(object)
    def __init__(self, parent=None):
        QtCore.QThread.__init__(self)
        # specify thread context for signals and slots:
        # test: comment following line, and run again
        self.moveToThread(self)
        # timer:
        self.timer = QtCore.QTimer()
        self.timer.moveToThread(self)
        self.timer.setInterval(800)
        self.timer.timeout.connect(self.readData)
    def run(self):
        self.timer.start()
        #start eventloop
        self.exec_()
    def readData(self):
        # keeping the thread busy
        # figure out if the GUI remains responsive (should be running on a different thread)
        result = []
        for i in range(1,1000000):
            result.append(math.pow(i,0.2)*math.pow(i,0.1)*math.pow(i,0.3))
        #
        self.received.emit("New serial data!")
    @QtCore.pyqtSlot(object)
    def writeData(self, data):
       #print(self.currentThreadId())
       print(data)
class MyGui(QtGui.QWidget):
    serialWrite = QtCore.pyqtSignal(object)
    def __init__(self, app, parent=None):
       self.app = app
       super(MyGui, self).__init__(parent)
       self.initUI()
    def initUI(self):
       self.bSend = QtGui.QPushButton("Send",self)
       self.bSend.clicked.connect(self.sendData)
       self.show()
    def closeEvent(self, event):
        print("Close.")
        self.serialc.quit();
    @QtCore.pyqtSlot(object)
    def updateData(self, data):
        print(data)
    def sendData(self, pressed):
       self.serialWrite.emit("Send Me! Please?")
    def usingMoveToThread(self):
        self.serialc = SerialCon()
        # binding signals:
        self.serialc.received.connect(self.updateData)
        self.serialWrite.connect(self.serialc.writeData)
        # start thread
        self.serialc.start()
if __name__ == "__main__":
    app = QtGui.QApplication(sys.argv)
    guui = MyGui(app)
    guui.usingMoveToThread()
    sys.exit(app.exec_())
I consider it a workaround for now, but it does not really answer the question for me.
Plus, as mentioned in the previously linked QT blog entry,
it is not really the intended way to use the QThread. 
So I am still wondering how to get the first code in my question to work as expected.
If you have some ideas about what is wrong with my first code, please let my know!
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