Qt qmake TARGET value with special characters - qt

How can I name output executable in qmake, with local characters like ä or ź. Every time I put a TARGET value with special characters, Qt throwing an error:
No rule to make target 'xxx.rc', needed by 'xxx.o'. Stop.
ex. TARGET = "genügen" or TARGET = "Obciążeń"

Related

QMake 5.15 don't understand wildcard adding files [duplicate]

I have a .pro file which looks like:
SOURCES += myfolder/source1.cpp \
myfolder/source2.cpp
HEADERS += myfolder/header1.h\
myfolder/header2.h
FORMS += myfolder/form1.ui\
myfolder/form2.ui
And everything works great. However, if I try to use an asterisk to include all the files, i.e.:
SOURCES += myfolder/*.cpp
HEADERS += myfolder/*.h
FORMS += myfolder/*.ui
qmake throws a file-not-found-error:
WARNING: Failure to find: myfolder\*.cpp
[...]
:-1: error: No rule to make target `myfolder/*.cpp', needed by `release/source1.o'. Stop.
In both cases, Qt-Creator can find the files.
Is there a way to use the asterisk? It's annoying to type the files manually.
Thank you!
[EDIT: Qt 4.8.4, Windows 7, Qt-Creator 2.6.1. Sry for forgetting this thought it isnt needed.]
[EDIT: Found solution: http://qt-project.org/forums/viewthread/1127 . Thank you anyway!]
In qmake 3.0, at least, it's possible to use something like:
SOURCES = $$files(*.cpp, true)
HEADERS = $$files(*.h, true)
The true argument will cause the files function to recursively find all files matching the pattern given by the first argument.
At first, using asterisk is bad practice - despite that qmake allows it, QtCreator cannot edit such *.pro correctly on adding new, renaming or deleting file. So try to add new files with "New file" or "Add existing files" dialogs.
QMake has for loop and function $$files(directory_path: String). Also append files to SOURCES or HEADERS variable respectively.
Brief example, which adds all files, but not directories, to variable FILES (not affect build or project tree):
files = $$files($$PWD/src)
win32:files ~= s|\\\\|/|g
for(file, files):!exists($$file/*):FILES += $$file
If you want to check if file is *.cpp, try to use contains($$file, ".cpp").
files = $$files($$PWD/src)
win32:files ~= s|\\\\|/|g
for(file, files):!exists($$file/*):contains($$file, ".cpp"):SOURCES += $$file

Add an extension in a .pro variable

I'm trying to print a message with QMake but I have problems with extensions:
lib_name = $$1
message("test1: $$MYPATH/$$lib_name/src/$$lib_name.pri");
message("test2: $$MYPATH/$$lib_name/src/$$lib_name");
For some reason, test1 doesn't print the correct path. It just prints the path until src/. But, test2 is ok. It prints everything until the value in $$1.
Any workaround?
QMake supports variables (objects) with members that can be used using the dot . operator e.g. target.path for INSTALLS. So, in your case, $$lib_name.pri means that you're accessing the member pri of lib_name which doesn't exist so there's no output.
You need to enclose variables in curly braces for QMake to distinguish them from the surrounding text i.e. $${lib_name}.pri.
Example:
message("test1: $$MYPATH/$$lib_name/src/$${lib_name}.pri");
# ~~~~~~~~~~~~
For more examples of objects, see Adding Custom Target and Adding Compilers sections of QMake's Advanced Usage page.
Here's another relevant SO thread: QMake - How to add and use a variable into the .pro file

Qt Installer Framework : Create shortcut with argument

Does anyone know how to add an argument to a shortcut created by QT IFW?
I need the exe it launches to be passed an argument.
Here's what works (with no argument):
component.addOperation( "CreateShortcut",
"#TargetDir#/MyApp.exe",
"#StartMenuDir#/#ProductName#.lnk",
"workingDirectory=#TargetDir#",
"iconPath=#TargetDir#/MyApp.exe",
"iconId=0");
I want the exe to get something like -c passed to it. I've tried a few approaches, but am not having any luck.
Qt Installer framework documentation is very poor, but you can read in operations the following:
"CreateShortcut" filename linkname [arguments]
Creates a shortcut from the file specified by filename to linkname. On Windows, this creates a .lnk file which can have arguments. On Unix, this creates a symbolic link.
So do it in that way:
component.addOperation("CreateShortcut", "#TargetDir#/Appname.exe", "#DesktopDir#/Appname.lnk", "-param");
Result in lnk target element:
C:\YourAppDirectory\Appname.exe -param
EDIT:
Your case works as well for me:
component.addOperation( "CreateShortcut","#TargetDir#/Appname.exe","#StartMenuDir#/#‌​ProductName#.lnk", "-param", "workingDirectory=#TargetDir#", "iconPath=#TargetDir#/Appnam‌​e.exe","iconId=0");
with -param as the last argument too.

Qt - Using asterisk (*) in .pro-File with directories

I have a .pro file which looks like:
SOURCES += myfolder/source1.cpp \
myfolder/source2.cpp
HEADERS += myfolder/header1.h\
myfolder/header2.h
FORMS += myfolder/form1.ui\
myfolder/form2.ui
And everything works great. However, if I try to use an asterisk to include all the files, i.e.:
SOURCES += myfolder/*.cpp
HEADERS += myfolder/*.h
FORMS += myfolder/*.ui
qmake throws a file-not-found-error:
WARNING: Failure to find: myfolder\*.cpp
[...]
:-1: error: No rule to make target `myfolder/*.cpp', needed by `release/source1.o'. Stop.
In both cases, Qt-Creator can find the files.
Is there a way to use the asterisk? It's annoying to type the files manually.
Thank you!
[EDIT: Qt 4.8.4, Windows 7, Qt-Creator 2.6.1. Sry for forgetting this thought it isnt needed.]
[EDIT: Found solution: http://qt-project.org/forums/viewthread/1127 . Thank you anyway!]
In qmake 3.0, at least, it's possible to use something like:
SOURCES = $$files(*.cpp, true)
HEADERS = $$files(*.h, true)
The true argument will cause the files function to recursively find all files matching the pattern given by the first argument.
At first, using asterisk is bad practice - despite that qmake allows it, QtCreator cannot edit such *.pro correctly on adding new, renaming or deleting file. So try to add new files with "New file" or "Add existing files" dialogs.
QMake has for loop and function $$files(directory_path: String). Also append files to SOURCES or HEADERS variable respectively.
Brief example, which adds all files, but not directories, to variable FILES (not affect build or project tree):
files = $$files($$PWD/src)
win32:files ~= s|\\\\|/|g
for(file, files):!exists($$file/*):FILES += $$file
If you want to check if file is *.cpp, try to use contains($$file, ".cpp").
files = $$files($$PWD/src)
win32:files ~= s|\\\\|/|g
for(file, files):!exists($$file/*):contains($$file, ".cpp"):SOURCES += $$file

Every executable must have an ELF header?

Every executable must have an ELF header?
Also i would like to know why libraries and header's properties are often associated with HEX values; what is this HEX related to? Why HEX and not just binary code or something else.
I'm referring to the HEX values that comes up with the use of ldd and readelf for example, the 2 utilities often used under linux.
This question is for a generic OS and is not targeting a specific one, the architecture is supposed to be X86 or ARM.
Every executable must have an ELF header
Yes, every ELF file begins with an ELF file header. If it doesn't, it's not a valid ELF file by definition.
Why HEX and not just binary code or something else
You appear to be very confused about what HEX means. Any integer number can be written in many different representations. Decimal (base-10), octal (base-8), hex (base-16) are the most common ones, but base-20 is not unheard of. It's just a number, regardless of how you choose to represent it.

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