012132c60d
[ChangeLog][Linux/XCB] Used libxcb-cursor to replace Xlib/libXcursor Fixes: QTBUG-67373 Change-Id: I04a30e401467e48b431a5cc63984f7b70a09faf0 Reviewed-by: Qt CI Bot <qt_ci_bot@qt-project.org> Reviewed-by: Liang Qi <liang.qi@qt.io> |
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.. | ||
tests | ||
.gitignore | ||
cmakeconversionrate.py | ||
condition_simplifier_cache.py | ||
condition_simplifier.py | ||
configurejson2cmake.py | ||
generate_module_map.sh | ||
helper.py | ||
json_parser.py | ||
Makefile | ||
Pipfile | ||
pro2cmake.py | ||
pro_conversion_rate.py | ||
qmake_parser.py | ||
README.md | ||
requirements.txt | ||
run_pro2cmake.py | ||
special_case_helper.py |
CMake Utils
This directory holds scripts to help the porting process from qmake
to cmake
for Qt6.
If you're looking to port your own Qt-based project from qmake
to cmake
, please use
qmake2cmake.
Requirements
- Python 3.7,
pipenv
orpip
to manage the modules.
Python modules
Since Python has many ways of handling projects, you have a couple of options to install the dependencies of the scripts:
Using pipenv
The dependencies are specified on the Pipfile
, so you just need to run
pipenv install
and that will automatically create a virtual environment
that you can activate with a pipenv shell
.
Using pip
It's highly recommended to use a virtualenvironment
to avoid conflict with other packages that are already installed: pip install virtualenv
.
- Create an environment:
virtualenv env
, - Activate the environment:
source env/bin/activate
(on Windows:source env\Scripts\activate.bat
) - Install the requirements:
pip install -r requirements.txt
If the pip install
command above doesn't work, try:
python3.7 -m pip install -r requirements.txt
Contributing to the scripts
You can verify if the styling of a script is compliant with PEP8, with a couple of exceptions:
Install flake8 (pip install flake8
) and run it
on all python source files:
make flake8
You can also modify the file with an automatic formatter,
like black (pip install black
),
and execute it:
make format