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The CONFIG variable specifies project configuration and compiler options. The values will be recognized internally by qmake and have special meaning. They are as follows.
These CONFIG values control compilation flags:
Option | Description |
---|---|
release | The project is to be built in release mode. This is ignored if debug is also specified. |
debug | The project is to be built in debug mode. |
debug_and_release | The project is built in both debug and release modes. |
build_all | If debug_and_release is specified, the project is built in both debug and release modes by default. |
warn_on | The compiler should output as many warnings as possible. This is ignored if warn_off is specified. |
warn_off | The compiler should output as few warnings as possible. |
Since the debug option overrides the release option when both are defined in the CONFIG variable, it is necessary to use the debug_and_release option if you want to allow both debug and release versions of a project to be built. In such a case, the Makefile that qmake generates includes a rule that builds both versions, and this can be invoked in the following way:
make all
Adding the build_all option to the CONFIG variable makes this rule the default when building the project, and installation targets will be created for both debug and release builds.
The following options define the application/library type:
Option | Description |
---|---|
qt | The target is a Qt application/library and requires the Qt library and header files. The proper include and library paths for the Qt library will automatically be added to the project. |
opengl | The target requires the OpenGL (or Mesa) headers/libraries. The proper include and library paths for these libraries will automatically be added to the project. |
thread | The target is a multi-threaded application or library. The proper defines and compiler flags will automatically be added to the project. |
x11 | The target is a X11 application or library. The proper include paths and libraries will automatically be added to the project. |
windows | The target is a Win32 window application (app only). The proper include paths,compiler flags and libraries will automatically be added to the project. |
console | The target is a Win32 console application (app only). The proper include paths, compiler flags and libraries will automatically be added to the project. |
dll | The target is a shared object/DLL.The proper include paths, compiler flags and libraries will automatically be added to the project. |
staticlib | The target is a static library (lib only). The proper compiler flags will automatically be added to the project. |
plugin | The target is a plugin (lib only). This enables dll as well. |
designer | The target is a plugin for Qt Designer. |
uic3 | Configures qmake to run uic3 on the content of FORMS3 if defined; otherwise the contents of FORMS will be processed instead. |
no_lflags_merge | Ensures that the list of libraries stored in the LIBS variable is not reduced to a list of unique values before it is used. |
resources | Configures qmake to run rcc on the content of RESOURCES if defined. |
These options are used to set the compiler flags:
Option | Description |
---|---|
exceptions | Exception support is enabled. |
rtti | RTTI support is enabled. |
stl | STL support is enabled. |
These options define specific things on Windows only:
Option | Description |
---|---|
flat | When using the vcapp template this will put all the source files into the source group and the header files into the header group regardless of what directory they reside in. Turning this option off will group the files within the source/header group depending on the directory they reside. This is turned on by default. |
These options only have an effect on Mac OS X:
Option | Description |
---|---|
ppc | Builds a PowerPC binary. |
x86 | Builds an i386 compatible binary. |
app_bundle | Puts the executable into a bundle (this is the default). |
lib_bundle | Puts the library into a library bundle. |
The build process for bundles is also influenced by the contents of the QMAKE_BUNDLE_DATA variable.
The CONFIG variable will also be checked when resolving scopes. You may assign anything to this variable.
For example:
CONFIG += qt console newstuff ... newstuff { SOURCES += new.cpp HEADERS += new.h }
qmake adds the values of this variable as compiler C preprocessor macros (-D option).
For example:
DEFINES += USE_MY_STUFF QT_DLL
This is only used on Windows when using the app template.
Specifies a .def file to be included in the project.
This variable contains the list of all directories to look in to resolve dependencies. This will be used when crawling through included files.
Specifies where to put the target file.
For example:
DESTDIR = ../../lib
This variable is set internally by qmake, which is basically the DESTDIR variable with the TARGET variable appened at the end. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
Specifies where to copy the target dll.
This variable contains a list of files to be included in the dist target. This feature is supported by UnixMake specs only.
For example:
DISTFILES += ../program.txt
This variable is set internally by qmake, which specifies where the dsp template file for basing generated dsp files is stored. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the .ui files (see Qt Designer) to be processed through uic before compiling. All dependencies, headers and source files required to build these .ui files will automatically be added to the project.
For example:
FORMS = mydialog.ui \ mywidget.ui \ myconfig.ui
If FORMS3 is defined in your project, then this variable must contain forms for uic, and not uic3. If CONFIG contains uic3, and FORMS3 is not defined, the this variable must contain only uic3 type forms.
This variable specifies the old style .ui files to be processed through uic3 before compiling, when CONFIG contains uic3. All dependencies, headers and source files required to build these .ui files will automatically be added to the project.
For example:
FORMS3 = my_uic3_dialog.ui \ my_uic3_widget.ui \ my_uic3_config.ui
Defines the header files for the project.
qmake will generate dependency information (unless -nodepend is specified on the command line) for the specified headers. qmake will also automatically detect if moc is required by the classes in these headers, and add the appropriate dependencies and files to the project for generating and linking the moc files.
For example:
HEADERS = myclass.h \ login.h \ mainwindow.h
See also SOURCES.
This variable specifies the #include directories which should be searched when compiling the project. Use ';' or a space as the directory separator.
For example:
INCLUDEPATH = c:/msdev/include d:/stl/include
This variable contains a list of resources that will be installed when make install or a similar installation procedure is executed. Each item in the list is typically defined with attributes that provide information about where it will be installed.
For example, the following target.path definition describes where the build target will be installed, and the INSTALLS assignment adds the build target to the list of existing resources to be installed:
target.path += $$[QT_INSTALL_PLUGINS]/imageformats INSTALLS += target
This variable contains a list of lex implementation files. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the names of intermediate lex object files.The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains a list of lex source files. All dependencies, headers and source files will automatically be added to the project for building these lex files.
For example:
LEXSOURCES = lexer.l
This variable contains a list of libraries to be linked into the project. If you are more comfortable with the Unix convension of -L/-l flags you are free to use them in a cross-platform manner and qmake will do the correct thing with these libraries on Windows (namely this means passing the full path of the library to the linker). The only limitation to this is the library must exist, for qmake to find which directory a -l lib lives in.
For example:
unix:LIBS += -L/usr/local/lib -lmath win32:LIBS += c:/mylibs/math.lib
By default, the list of libraries stored in LIBS is reduced to a list of unique names before it is used. To change this behavior, add the no_lflags_merge option to the CONFIG variable:
CONFIG += no_lflags_merge
This variable is used whenever a literal hash character (#) is needed in a variable declaration, perhaps as part of a file name or in a string passed to some external application.
For example:
# To include a literal hash character, use the $$LITERAL_HASH variable: urlPieces = http://doc.trolltech.com/4.0/qtextdocument.html pageCount message($$join(urlPieces, $$LITERAL_HASH))
By using LITERAL_HASH in this way, the # character can be used to construct a URL for the message() function to print to the console.
This variable specifies the name of the Makefile which qmake should use when outputting the dependency information for building a project. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the name of the Makefile generator to use when generating a Makefile. The value of this variable is typically handled internally by qmake and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the directory where all intermediate moc files should be placed.
For example:
unix:MOC_DIR = ../myproject/tmp win32:MOC_DIR = c:/myproject/tmp
This variable is generated from the SOURCES variable. The extension of each source file will have been replaced by .o (Unix) or .obj (Win32). The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the directory where all intermediate objects should be placed.
For example:
unix:OBJECTS_DIR = ../myproject/tmp win32:OBJECTS__DIR = c:/myproject/tmp
This variable is set by qmake if files can be found that contain the Q_OBJECT macro. OBJMOC contains the name of all intermediate moc object files. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
All libraries that the target depends on can be listed in this variable. Some backends do not support this, these include MSVC Dsp, and ProjectBuilder .pbproj files. Generally this is support internally by these build tools, this is usefull for explicitly listing dependant static libraries.
This list will go after all builtin (and $$PRE_TARGETDEPS) dependencies.
All libraries that the target depends on can be listed in this variable. Some backends do not support this, these include MSVC Dsp, and ProjectBuilder .pbproj files. Generally this is support internally by these build tools, this is usefull for explicitly listing dependant static libraries.
This list will go before all builtin dependencies.
This variable indicates the header file for creating a precompiled header file, to increase the compilation speed of a project. Precompiled headers are currently only supported on some platforms (Windows - all MSVC project types, Mac OS X - Xcode, Makefile, Unix - gcc 3.3 and up).
On other platforms, this variable has different meaning, as noted below.
This variable contains a list of header files that require some sort of pre-compilation step (such as with moc). The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the name of the qmake program itself and is placed in generated Makefiles. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the name of the qmake configuration to use when generating Makefiles. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake and rarely needs to be modified. Use the QMAKESPEC environment variable instead.
This variable is empty unless the app TEMPLATE is specified. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified. Use the following instead:
app { # Conditional code for 'app' template here }
This variable is empty unless the app or dll TEMPLATE is specified. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Unix platforms only.
This variable contains the command for invoking the program which creates, modifies and extracts archives. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable is used to hold the data that will be installed with a library bundle, and is often used to specify a collection of header files.
For example, the following lines add path/to/header_one.h and path/to/header_two.h to a group containing information about the headers supplied with the framework:
FRAMEWORK_HEADERS.version = Versions FRAMEWORK_HEADERS.files = path/to/header_one.h path/to/header_two.h FRAMEWORK_HEADERS.path = Headers QMAKE_BUNDLE_DATA += FRAMEWORK_HEADERS
The last line adds the information about the headers to the collection of resources that will be installed with the library bundle.
Library bundles are created when the lib_bundle option is added to the CONFIG variable.
This is used on Mac OS X only.
This variable contains the flags for the C compiler in debug mode.The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the compiler flags for creating a multi-threaded application or when the version of Qt that you link against is a multi-threaded statically linked library. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the compiler flags for creating a debuggable multi-threaded application or when the version of Qt that you link against is a debuggable multi-threaded statically linked library. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Windows only.
This variable contains the compiler flags for creating a multi-threaded dll or when the version of Qt that you link against is a multi-threaded dll. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Windows only.
This variable contains the compiler flags for creating a debuggable multi-threaded dll or when the version of Qt that you link against is a debuggable multi-threaded statically linked library. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the compiler flags for creating a non-debuggable application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Unix platforms only.
This variable contains the compiler flags for creating a shared library. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the compiler flags for creating a multi-threaded application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable is not empty if the warn_off TEMPLATE option is specified. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable is not empty if the warn_on TEMPLATE option is specified. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains any files which are not generated files (such as moc and uic generated files) and object files that should be removed when using "make clean".
This variable contains the C++ compiler flags for creating a debuggable application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the C++ compiler flags for creating a multi-threaded application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the C++ compiler flags for creating a debuggable multi-threaded application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Windows only.
This variable contains the C++ compiler flags for creating a multi-threaded dll. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Windows only.
This variable contains the C++ compiler flags for creating a multi-threaded debuggable dll. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the C++ compiler flags for creating an application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the C++ compiler flags for creating a shared library. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the C++ compiler flags for creating a multi-threaded application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the C++ compiler flags for suppressing compiler warnings. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains C++ compiler flags for generating compiler warnings. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the extention for shared libraries. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable changes the extention used on included moc files.
See also File Extensions.
This variable changes the extention used on /e Designer UI files.
See also File Extensions.
This variable changes the extention used on created PRL files.
See also File Extensions, Library Dependencies.
This variable changes the extention used on files given to lex.
See also File Extensions, LEXSOURCES.
This variable changes the extention used on files given to yacc.
See also File Extensions, YACCSOURCES.
This variable changes the extention used on generated object files.
See also File Extensions.
This variable changes the interpretation of all suffixes in this list of values as files of type C++ source code.
See also File Extensions.
This variable changes the interpretation of all suffixes in this list of values as files of type C header files.
See also File Extensions.
This variable contains the list of requirements that were failed to be met when qmake was used. For example, the sql module is needed and wasn't compiled into Qt. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the file tags needed to be entered into the Makefile, such as SOURCES and HEADERS. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
For projects where the build target is a Mac OS X framework, this variable is used to specify the version number that will be applied to the resulting framework.
This is used on Mac OS X only.
This variable contains the location of all known header files to be added to INCLUDEPATH when building an application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the location of OpenGL header files to be added to INCLUDEPATH when building an application with OpenGL support. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the location of all known header file paths to be added to INCLUDEPATH when building a Qt application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the location of all known header file paths to be added to INCLUDEPATH when building a multi-threaded application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Unix platforms only.
This variable contains the location of X11 header file paths to be added to INCLUDEPATH when building a X11 application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Windows only.
This variable contains link flags when building console programs. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Windows only.
This variable contains link flags when building console dlls. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains link flags when building debuggable applications. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains link flags when building plugins. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains link flags when building programs that use the Qt library built as a dll. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains link flags when building applications for release. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains link flags when building applications which are using the app template. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains link flags when building shared libraries The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the link flags to set the name of shared objects, such as .so or .dll. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains link flags when building multi-threaded projects. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Windows only.
This variable contains link flags when building windows projects. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Windows only.
This variable contains link flags when building windows dll projects. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the location of all known library directories.The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Unix platforms only.
This variable contains the location of all library directory with -L prefixed. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the location of the OpenGL library directory.The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the location of the Qt library directory.The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Unix platforms only.
This variable contains the location of the X11 library directory.The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains all project libraries. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Windows only.
This variable contains all project libraries that should be linked against when building a console application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains all OpenGL libraries. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains all OpenGL Qt libraries.The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains all Qt libraries.The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Windows only.
This variable contains all Qt libraries when Qt is built as a dll. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains all the libraries needed to link against if OpenGL support is turned on. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains all the libraries needed to link against if thread support is turned on. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used with Borland compilers only.
This variable contains the runtime library needed to link against when building an application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used with Borland compilers only.
This variable contains the runtime library needed to link against when building a multi-threaded application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Unix platforms only.
This variable contains all libraries that need to be linked against when building a multi-threaded application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Windows only.
This variable contains all windows libraries.The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Unix platforms only.
This variable contains all X11 libraries.The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This is used on Unix platforms only.
This variable contains all X11 session management libraries. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable is not empty if the lib template is specified. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the command to execute when creating a shared library. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the command to execute after linking the TARGET together. This variable is normally empty and therefore nothing is executed, additionally some backends will not support this - mostly only Makefile backends.
This variable contains the command to execute before linking the TARGET together. This variable is normally empty and therefore nothing is executed, additionally some backends will not support this - mostly only Makefile backends.
This variable contains the command to execute when creating a link to a shared library. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the name of the Makefile to create. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the names of all moc source files to generate and include in the project. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the location of qmake if it is not in the path. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable is not empty if Qt was built as a dll. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the individual rule needed to build an object. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the individual rule needed to build an object. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the individual rule needed to build an object. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the individual rule needed to build an object. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the name of the project target. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the location of uic if it is not in the path. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
It can be used to specify arguments to uic as well, such as additional plugin paths. For example:
QMAKE_UIC = uic -L /path/to/plugin
This variable contains a list of names of static plugins that are to be compiled with an application so that they are available as built-in resources.
This variable contains the name of the resource file for the application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the directory where all intermediate resource files should be placed.
For example:
unix:RCC_DIR = ../myproject/resources win32:RCC_DIR = c:/myproject/resources
This is a special variable processed by qmake. If the contents of this variable do not appear in CONFIG by the time this variable is assigned, then a minimal Makefile will be generated that states what dependencies (the values assigned to REQUIRES) are missing.
This is mainly used in Qt's build system for building the examples.
This variable contains the name of the resource file for the application. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the name of all source files in the project.
For example:
SOURCES = myclass.cpp \ login.cpp \ mainwindow.cpp
See also HEADERS
This variable is set by qmake if files can be found that contain the Q_OBJECT macro. SRCMOC contains the name of all the generated moc files. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable, when used with the subdirs TEMPLATE contains the names of all subdirectories to look for a project file.
For example:
SUBDIRS = kernel \ tools
This specifies the name of the target file.
For example:
TEMPLATE = app TARGET = myapp SOURCES = main.cpp
The project file above would produce an executable named myapp on unix and 'myapp.exe' on windows.
This variable specifies the target's extension. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the target's extension with a major version number. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the target's extension with version number. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains the name of the template to use when generating the project. The allowed values are:
For example:
TEMPLATE = lib SOURCES = main.cpp TARGET = mylib
The template can be overridden by specifying a new template type with the -t command line option. This overrides the template type after the .pro file has been processed. With .pro files that use the template type to determine how the project is built, it is necessary to declare TEMPLATE on the command line rather than use the -t option.
This variable contains a list of translation (.ts) files that contain translations of the user interface text into non-native languages.
See the Qt Linguist Manual for more information about internationalization (i18n) and localization (l10n) with Qt.
This variable contains a list of the generated implementation files by UIC. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable is generated from the UICIMPLS variable. The extension of each file will have been replaced by .o (Unix) or .obj (Win32). The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable specifies the directory where all intermediate files from uic should be placed. This variable overrides both UI_SOURCES_DIR and UI_HEADERS_DIR.
For example:
unix:UI_DIR = ../myproject/ui win32:UI_DIR = c:/myproject/ui
This variable specifies the directory where all declaration files (as generated by uic) should be placed.
For example:
unix:UI_HEADERS_DIR = ../myproject/ui/include win32:UI_HEADERS_DIR = c:/myproject/ui/include
This variable specifies the directory where all implementation files (as generated by uic) should be placed.
For example:
unix:UI_SOURCES_DIR = ../myproject/ui/src win32:UI_SOURCES_DIR = c:/myproject/ui/src
This variable contains the version number of the library if the lib TEMPLATE is specified.
For example:
VERSION = 1.2.3
This variable contains the major version number of the library, if the lib template is specified.
This variable contains the minor version number of the library, if the lib template is specified.
This variable contains the patch version number of the library, if the lib template is specified.
This variable tells qmake where to search for files it cannot open. With this you may tell qmake where it may look for things like SOURCES, and if it finds an entry in SOURCES that cannot be opened it will look through the entire VPATH list to see if it can find the file on its own.
See also DEPENDPATH.
This variable contains a list of yacc source files. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains a list of yacc object files. The value of this variable is typically handled by qmake or qmake.conf and rarely needs to be modified.
This variable contains a list of yacc source files to be included in the project. All dependencies, headers and source files will automatically be included in the project.
For example:
YACCSOURCES = moc.y
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