This guide aims to create a simple Qt application with Qt Quick graphical user interface. The tutorial uses CMake as the project format and C++ as the language of source code. The application created is simple in design and consists of sole window.
QtQuick is a user interface library for creating declarative user interfaces that are separated from programming logic. This framework is implemented as a part of the Qt library set. QML is a user interface specification and programming language.
CMake is the project generator for many platforms and build systems. The CMake build system uses
the unified file format and is able to generate makefiles, Visual Studio
solutions, and projects for many other build systems from the same project file.
You can check out some CMake examples on the official website if you want to learn more.
In order to develop an application using CMake with Qt QML, we first need to make sure that we have all the necessary tools.
Compiling and running the sample project requires GCC, CMake, GNU Make and the Qt development libraries with Qt Quick enabled. This tutorial specifies how to install pre-compiled packages from standard repositories.
The following instructions apply to:
- Ubuntu 18.04
- Ubuntu 16.04
- Debian 9
sudo apt-get install -y \
build-essential \
cmake \
qtbase5-dev \
qtdeclarative5-dev \
qml-module-qtquick2 \
qml-module-qtquick-controls
The following instructions apply to:
- Fedora 22 and higher
sudo dnf install -y \
gcc gcc-c++ make \
cmake \
qt5-qtquickcontrols \
qt5-qtbase-devel \
qt5-qtdeclarative-devel \
qt5-qtquickcontrols2-devel
- CentOS 7
sudo yum install -y \
gcc gcc-c++ make \
cmake \
qt5-qtquickcontrols \
qt5-qtbase-devel \
qt5-qtdeclarative-devel \
qt5-qtquickcontrols2-devel
The directory of the project is laid out as follows:
$ tree
.
├── CMakeLists.txt
└── src
├── CMakeLists.txt
├── main.cpp
├── main.qml
└── qml.qrc
1 directory, 5 files
All source files for the project go in src
, and main project specifications
in CMake format go in CMakeLists.txt
. Larger projects tend to be
organised in sub-directories for modules, executables and libraries, each with
its individual sub-directory and CMakeLists.txt
file.
With this example, we start with the declarative file for the user interface, which is specified in
src/main.qml
. The code below creates a small window without any controls:
The next code imports all necessary modules. The exact version of QtQuick
is not
the same as the version of the Qt framework used. QtQuick.Controls
library
contains some basic controls for the user interface.
import QtQuick 2.0
import QtQuick.Controls 1.0
Main application window is represented with the ApplicationWindow
control in the
Qt Quick library.
ApplicationWindow
{
...
}
There are four attributes of the main window that specify its size and title.
The visible
aattribute specifies that the window should
be shown right after launch.
visible: true
width: 640
height: 480
title: qsTr("Minimal Qml")
Next, let’s look at the QML resource file for an application that consists of sole QML file
named main.qml
. The file is written in XML with the RCC
element as root and qresource
as
the element for group of resources. This project contains only one group that's
root (i.e. /
). Larger projects may contain additional qresource
elements for
each resource subgroup (e.g. customControls
, customWindows
, etc.).
The main entry point of the application provides the C++ code for displaying Qt Quick user interface.
The following code constructs a standard object for a Qt application:
QApplication app(argc, argv);
In the next section, the QML parsing object is initiated for the application. This object
receives the string with the address of the main QML resource as the construction
parameter. In this case, qrc:/main.qml
is the address specified in the qml.qrc
file. qrc
is the default prefix for the QML resource, and /main.qml
references the
resource named main.qml
in the root resource directory (/
).
QQmlApplicationEngine engine;
engine.load(QUrl(QStringLiteral("qrc:/main.qml")));
The exec
method starts the Qt application:
return app.exec();
Now we’ll show you how to deploy a Qt Quick application using the CMake project format.
Let’s look at the main project file. The first line sets the minimum version of CMake
for the project. It then includes the Qt5 framework into the application
as well as the src
subdirectory so that CMake will search
for the project file (CMakeLists.txt
) there.
This is the project file for the executable:
The header files of the Qt project should be included into the project so that the makefiles generated will specify them in the corresponding compilation commands. There Qt5Widgets stands the header files for the Qt Framework and QtQml invokes special files for QML functions.
include_directories(${Qt5Widgets_INCLUDE_DIRS} ${QtQml_INCLUDE_DIRS})
The definitions as well as the Qt include files should be specified in the makefile compilation commands.
add_definitions(${Qt5Widgets_DEFINITIONS} ${QtQml_DEFINITIONS}
${${Qt5Quick_DEFINITIONS}})
The Qt framework requires the code to be created from the Qt resource files.
This is achieved using the special qt5_add_resources
command. The QML resource
file path relative to this file is passed as an argument:
qt5_add_resources(QT_RESOURCES qml.qrc)
For Qt projects with graphical user interface, the compiler should receive special parameters in order to compile:
set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS} ${Qt5Widgets_EXECUTABLE_COMPILE_FLAGS}")
Qt programs require several additional compilation steps for moc, rcc and uic.
set(CMAKE_AUTOMOC ON)
set(CMAKE_AUTORCC ON)
set(CMAKE_AUTOUIC ON)
The name of the project that will be used as the name of the compiled executable,
is specified using the set
command, which receives the name of a variable (i.e.
PROJECT
) and it's value.
set(PROJECT "MinimalQml")
The project
command sets the current project within the CMake file and receives
the value of the variable defined above:
project(${PROJECT})
The compiler flags for compiling C++ sources are set below. These flags set very strict compilation rules and help to detect and locate a lot of potential issues during compilation.
set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "${CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS} -Wall -Werror -std=c++11
-fstrict-aliasing -pedantic-errors -pedantic -Wno-deprecated-declarations
-Wno-unused-variable")
There are also conditional commands in the CMake. The code below
detects if there are HEADERS
in the project. If the header files were not previously set,
the file(GLOB ... .h)
command creates a list of all header files in the
current directory and passes them as header files of the current project. The
same applies to the .cpp
sources that are stored in the SOURCES
variable if
that was not defined.
if(NOT DEFINED HEADERS)
file(GLOB HEADERS ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/*.h)
endif()
if(NOT DEFINED SOURCES)
file(GLOB SOURCES ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR}/*.cpp)
endif()
The source_group
definition creates a group of files that are placed in some
build systems (e.g. project sub-directories in Visual Studio).
source_group("Header Files" FILES ${HEADERS})
source_group("Source Files" FILES ${SOURCES})
This command states that the project results in an executable file. The first parameter receives the name of an executable file (which in this case is the same as the name of the project). The rest of the arguments are project sources, headers, and compiled Qt resources.
add_executable(${PROJECT} ${HEADERS} ${SOURCES} ${QT_RESOURCES})
The set of libraries that will be linked with the executable above is set with
the target_link_libraries
command. Like the command above, it receives the name
of project's executable and a list of libraries. In this case, the project uses only
Qt framework libraries.
target_link_libraries(${PROJECT}
Qt5::Widgets
Qt5::Qml
Qt5::Quick
)
Now it’s time for building with CMake.
You can build your program using the commands below. CMake takes a directory
with the main project's CMakeLists.txt
file as an argument. Then it
creates build files for GNU make, which builds an executable.
cd <PathToProject>
mkdir build && cd build
cmake ..
make
After a successful build, the binary MinimalQml
will end up in build/src/
.
./src/MinimalQml
You can probably avoid working with Qt Creator by creating a Qt QML C++ plugin with CMake, but we prefer going the traditional route.
If you want to know more about Qt Creator, you can find the official manual. Now, let’s look into how we can use Qt Creator with our Qt CMake example project.
Go to the Welcome tab (1) in the main window and select Open Project (2).
In the dialog box that opens, locate the CMakeLists.txt
file in the project’s root directory.
Next, select the version of Qt framework that you’ll use to compile the project. If you have multiple frameworks installed, it’s possible to select several.
After opening the project its directory structure will be visible in the Projects panel in Qt Creator.
The C++ source files are treated as usual by the editor.
QRC resource files are opened as a resource tree.
From the resource tree, you can open QML files for the project.
- Qt Documentation
- CMake