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-Qt for Debian README
---------------------
-
-1. Preface
-
-This README is intended to give developers and users exact information
-about how the qt-x11-free package provided by TrollTech AS has been packaged
-for Debian in case you either want to faciliate it for development
-of applications and libraries or plugins using the Qt class library. With
-qt-x11-3.1.1, the Debian packages have been massively restructured to get
-the most out of theoriginal Qt package and spit the contents up into
-several packages so that they make the most sensefor several groups of
-users; developers, application users, translators of Qt-based
-applications and Debian packagers who are packaging applications developed
-with Qt.2.
-
-2. General Overview
-
-As Qt is a huge package that contains a complete environment for
-developers, it needs to be split up into several packages that make it
-easier for everyone else to handle it and not to retquire
-unnecessary disk space for end-users. Additionally, Qt can be configured
-in several ways - and therefore also used in several ways. Qt development
-usually retquires the environment variable QTDIR. As Debian is placing
-libraries and header files in a tquite specific filesystem order, this
-usually breaks setting a single environment variable to meet the
-retquirements of packages. Therefore, symlinks are used to set up the system
-to meet both, the Debian filesystem standard and the QTDIR variable. All of
-Qt (so the QTDIR path) is available in /usr/share/tqt3. If you need to set
-QTDIR, do export QTDIR=/usr/share/tqt3
-
-As far as the common build configuration goes, we note explicitely that the
-Debian package of Qt will in very rare cases break the compilation (most
-likely the linking) of applications on Debian which use Qt, in particular
-utilizing styles in an incorrect way by deriving from one of the styles
-that ship with Qt. In case you are a Debian packager and encounter
-problems, contact Debian Qt/KDE Maintainers (debian-qt-kde@lists.debian.org).
-We will tell you why things don't work and what you should communicate on
-with the programmers of your application that you are packaging. The build
-configuration generally is intended to provide a Qt version that is as
-small as possible in terms of the memory size it retquires. Therefore,
-everything inside Qt that can be compiled as plugins has been compiled that
-way. This includes:
-
-- imageformats: jpeg and mng - codecs (for languages like arab, japanese
- etc provided with Qt)
-- sql drivers for databases (MySQL, ODBC and PostgreSQL)
-
-The only exception is the imageformat png which has been compiled built-in
-due to the fact that there is literally no program that uses no icons at
-all and icons are to be used preferrably in png format. The plugins are all
-located under /usr/lib/tqt3/plugins. This is also the install location you
-should choose as a package maintainer for
-qt-plugins so the user doesn't have to customize his library path for
-loading Qt plugins. The only exception is that KDE delivers a set of Qt
-plugins as well (mainly styles and designer plugins); those are placed in
-/usr/lib/trinity/plugins.
-
-QMotif Extension: As this code is only available in commercial environments
-(and produces a static library libqmotif.a anyway that those commercial
-applications have to be linked against in addition to Qt), we left out all
-header files of the libtqt3-headers package that are belonging to this
-QMotif extension.
-
-Oracle Database driver, Sybase & Microsoft SQL Server driver: Those drivers
-are only available in a commercial version of Qt due to license
-incompatibilities with the GPL. If you need to faciliate those drivers,
-please visit http://www.trolltech.com and have a read at
-http://doc.trolltech.com/3.0/sql-driver.html.
-
-3. Packages (End-User)
-
-The Qt built has been split up into several packages that allow for easy
-installation for all types of users. The End-user usually only retquires to
-have the following packages installed to run an application that links
-against Qt:
-
-Threaded version:libtqt3-mt (the library libtqt-mt.so.* and libtqui.so.* for
-loading designer-made user interfaces at runtime).
-
-Optionally depending on the program's retquirements:
-
-libtqt3-mt-odbc
-libtqt3-mt-mysql
-libtqt3-mt-psql
-
-In addition to the libraries, it may make sense to install the program
-qtconfig to customize the look and behaviorof Qt programs. If you have KDE
-installed, the KDE control center will take this task automatically in most
-cases. qtconfig is available in the package tqt3-qtconfig.
-
-Also, Qt programs can make use of the online-help tool that ships with Qt,
-the Qt Assistant. The Assistant can be installed with the package
-qt3-assistant.
-
-Qt Configuration files
-----------------------
-Qt programs most often use QSettings to store their information in configuration
-files. With Qt 3.2, the new option --sysconfdir has been introduced that allows
-us to use /etc/tqt3 as the system-wide location where qt-program specific global
-configuration files can go. If you're a programmer that wants to get familiar with
-that, please look at the examples, documentation and the code in designer or
-assistant as well as qtconfig.
-
-4. Packages (Package maintainers)
-
-In addition to the library, a package maintainer will retquire an additional
-set of packages to compile a package that retquires Qt. Depending on the
-version of the qt library, you will retquire a different set of packages;
-the most common option should be to make your application link against the
-multi-threaded version (-mt).Packages necessary for compiling Qt
-applications from source:
-
-libtqt3-mt-dev (use libtqt3-dev for linking against -lqt, this package only
- contains the .so files and the header file for libtqui.so)
-
-libtqt3-headers (header files for libqt and libtqt-mt)
-
-qt3-dev-tools (this package contains the tools uic and moc as well as
-qmake, retquired for building Qt applications)
-
-If, however, you encounter an older program not to compile with this set
-read the FAQ at the end of this document.
-
-5. Packages (Developers)
-
-In addition to the packages that packagers retquire, a developer usually
-will retquire the Qt API documentationas well as tools like the assistant,
-linguist or designer. However, you should be fine with installing the API
-documentation that you can browse with a webbrowser, optionally with the
-assistant. They are available in /usr/share/doc/tqt3-doc/html.
-For a regular development environment, install tqt3-designer and tqt3-doc.
-
-For faciliating Qt's extended environment to write plugins for the Qt
-Designer or extend the Designer as well as utilizing the Qt Assistant by
-calling it from within your program, install tqt3-apps-dev, which contains
-the static libraries and header files retquired for this functionality.
-
-For Embedded Developers, the program tqvfb (Qt Virtual Frambuffer) and
-maketqpf (embedded fonts tool)have been packaged into
-qt3-dev-tools-embedded. For developers that work on migrating their program
-from any Qt version prior to Qt 3.x to the Qt 3.x platform you will find
-additional tools in the tqt3-dev-tools-compat.
-
-For using the QTranslator class and where to find the qm-file for qt as
-well as where to place your translations,see the next section.
-
-If your program doesn't compile with those settings in case you have
-started your project with Qt 1.x or 2.x, please read the FAQ section at the
-end of this document.
-
-5. Packages (Translators)
-
-In order to translate a Qt program into any other language, the Qt 3 way to
-do this is to let the developer create a ts-file containing the strings
-that the program exposes on the user interface. The tools to create the
-ts-file and to create the final qm (Q-message binary) file, lupdate and
-lrelease, are included in tqt3-dev-tools.The single translator that only
-gets provided the ts file and has to return a translated ts file, it
-is absolutely enough to install tqt3-linguist; the package tqt3-assistant can
-be installed to access the online-help for the Qt Linguist itself.
-In case you're converting an application using Qt prior to Qt 3, you may
-want to uitilize the tqt3-dev-tools-compat which include the necessary tools
-to convert older qm files to the new ts file standard.
-
-Locations of message translations:
-
-Qt ships with a set of translations for the strings used inside Qt. Those
-translations will be installed into /usr/share/tqt3/translations (qm files
-only), which equals $QTDIR/translations respectively
-qInstallPath() + QString( "/translations" ).
-
-The configure option --translationdir has been set to /usr/share/tqt3/translations
-accordingly since it was introduced in Qt 3.2.
-
-To correctly enable your program to display the translations to the Qt
-library and to load the translation of the program itself, we currently
-suggest to either install your translations along with any other data files
-into/usr/share/<appname>/, translation files into the subdirectory
-translations (that is /usr/share/<appname>/translations) The code that your
-application should use to load the Qt translation will have to look like
-the following:
-
-int main( int argc, char **argv )
- {
- QApplication app( argc, argv );
-
- // translation file for Qt
- QTranslator qt( 0 );
- qt.load( QString( "qt_" ) + QTextCodec::locale(), qInstallPath() +
- QString( "/translations" );
- app.installTranslator( &qt );
-
- // translation file for application strings
- QTranslator myapp( 0 );
- myapp.load( QString( "myapp_" ) + QTextCodec::locale(), "." );
- // use a substitue for $prefix/share/appname/translations here
- app.installTranslator( &myapp );
-
-6. Frequently Asked Questions
-
-Using Qt for Debian as a developer or packager
-----------------------------------------------
-
-Q: I want to compile a source package that utilizes qmake to build the
-Makefiles. What do I need to do to makeit work ?
-
-A: qmake retquires two environment variables to be set, QTDIR and QMAKESPEC.
-To make it work, do
-export QTDIR=/usr/share/tqt3
-export QMAKESPEC=linux-g++
-
-Then run qmake -o Makefile <projectfile>.pro
-
-After that, the Makefile is correctly created to build your application on
-Debian. As a packager, export thosetwo variables in the rules file before
-calling qmake.
-
-Q: I have an application that when linking gives me symbol referencing
-errors to Q*Style. Why does my applicationnot link correctly ?
-
-A: The author of the program is using the styles that ship with Qt directly
-instead of using the QStylePlugin interface.If you are the author of the
-program, change your program to use QStylePlugin. If you are a packager,
-write to theauthor of the program that he is assuming that the styles
-shipped with Qt are built-in to the library which is not the case on Debian
-and that he please should fix this and use QStylePlugin.
-
-Q: Where are all the examples and tutorials ? And how do I build them ?
-
-A: Qt ships with examples and tutorials; so does the Linguist and Designer.
-The tutorials and examples are compressed tarballs which you can unpack with
-tar -zxvf into your home directory. Change into the tqt3-examples directory
-and run the provided ./build-examples script. All Qt examples and tutorials,
-including those for designer and the linguist, will be compiled. You will
-notice however, that those examples that inherit from style classes which
-are not built-in into Qt but configured as a plugin will not compile due
-to the fact that they can't link to the Qt library.
-
-Q: I'm writing a pure Qt application and I want to ship it with a default
-configuration file. Where does that global configuration file go if I make
-use of the QSettings class ?
-
-A: With qt-3.2.0, Trolltech has introduced a configure option to Qt called
---sysconfdir which we intentionally set to /etc/tqt3 similar to /etc/trinity for
-KDE programs. Install your application's system wide configuration file
-to /etc/tqt3.
-
-Q: I'm compiling a program and I have a compile error due to a missing
-include. Why isn't that include not present in the Debian packages anymore
-? It compiled with older versions of Debian packages of Qt !
-
-A: This may be due to two reasons: either the package still uses the old
-includes from Qt 1.x or 2.x that got basically renamed by Trolltech due to
-the naming convention. The filenames are now all following the scheme
-
-ClassName -> classname.h.
-
-Therefore, if you are the developer of the affected program, change your
-sources according to this scheme. Qt ships with two tools, tqt20fix and
-tqtrename140, to help developers migrate their API to the Qt 3 version,
-which can help you in the transition upgrade to Qt 3.
-
-If you are affected by this as a packager, notify upstream to fix those
-problems and in the meanwhile use libtqt3-compat-headers as a build
-dependency which includes the compatibility headers that just include the
-right files from the new API again.
-
-Q: I have a question not covered by this FAQ and README file. Who should I
-turn to ?
-
-A: Please turn to Debian Qt/KDE Maintainers (debian-qt-kde@lists.debian.org)
-for any questions regarding Qt on Debian.
-
- -- Ralf Nolden <nolden@kde.org> Sun, 26 Jan 2003 20:39:19 +0100
- -- Ralf Nolden <nolden@kde.org> Mon, 1 Sep 2003 19:24:16 +0200
- -- Modestas Vainius <modestas@vainius.eu> Fri, 22 Feb 2008 01:40:06 +0200