CMake
is a group of tools that allow to build, test, and package applications. Just like Qt, it is available on all major development platforms. It is also supported by various IDE's, including Qt Creator.
In this section we will show the most basic way to use Qt in a CMake project. First, we create a basic console application. Then, we extend the project into a GUI application that uses Qt Widgets.
If you want to know how to build an existing CMake project with Qt, see the documentation on how to build projects with CMake on the command line.
A CMake
project is defined by files written in the CMake language. The main file is called CMakeLists.txt
, and is usually placed in the same directory as the actual program sources.
Here is a typical CMakeLists.txt
file for a console application written in C++ using Qt:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.16) project(helloworld VERSION 1.0.0 LANGUAGES CXX) set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 17) set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED ON) find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Core) qt_standard_project_setup() add_executable(helloworld main.cpp ) target_link_libraries(helloworld PRIVATE Qt6::Core)
Let's go through the content.
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.16)
cmake_minimum_required()
specifies the minimum CMake version that the application requires. Qt itself requires at least CMake version 3.16. If you use a Qt that was built statically - the default in Qt for iOS and Qt for WebAssembly - you need CMake 3.21.1 or newer.
project(helloworld VERSION 1.0.0 LANGUAGES CXX)
project()
sets a project name and the default project version. The LANGUAGES
argument tells CMake that the program is written in C++.
set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 17) set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED ON)
Qt 6 requires a compiler supporting C++ version 17 or newer. Enforcing this by setting the CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD
, CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED
variables will let CMake print an error if the compiler is
too old.
find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Core)
This tells CMake to look up Qt 6, and import the Core
module. There is no point in continuing if CMake
cannot locate the module, so we do set the REQUIRED
flag to let CMake abort in
this case.
If successful, the module will set some CMake variables documented in Module variables. It furthermore imports the Qt6::Core
target that we use
below.
For find_package
to be successful, CMake
must find the Qt installation. There are different ways you can tell CMake
about Qt, but the most common and recommended approach is to set the
CMake cache variable CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH
to include the Qt 6 installation prefix. Note that Qt Creator will handle this transparently for you.
qt_standard_project_setup()
The qt_standard_project_setup command sets project-wide defaults for a typical Qt application.
Among other things, this command sets the CMAKE_AUTOMOC
variable to ON
, which instructs CMake to automatically set up rules so that Qt's Meta-Object Compiler (moc) is
called transparently, when required.
See qt_standard_project_setup's reference for details.
add_executable(helloworld main.cpp )
add_executable()
tells CMake that we want to build an executable (so not a library) called helloworld
as a target. The target should be built from the C++ source file main.cpp
.
Note that you typically do not list header files here. This is different from qmake, where header files need to be explicitly listed so that they are processed by the Meta-Object Compiler (moc).
For less trivial projects, you may want to call qt_add_executable() instead. It is a wrapper around the built-in add_executable()
command, providing
additional logic to automatically handle things like linking of Qt plugins in static Qt builds, platform-specific customization of library names and so on.
For creating libraries, see qt_add_library.
target_link_libraries(helloworld PRIVATE Qt6::Core)
Finally, target_link_libraries
tells CMake that the helloworld
executable makes use of Qt Core by referencing the Qt6::Core
target imported by the
find_package()
call above. This will not only add the right arguments to the linker, but also makes sure that the right include directories, compiler definitions are passed to the C++ compiler. The
PRIVATE
keyword is not strictly necessary for an executable target, but it is good practice to specify it. If helloworld
was a library rather than an executable, then either PRIVATE
or
PUBLIC
should be specified (PUBLIC
if the library mentions anything from Qt6::Core
in its headers, PRIVATE
otherwise).
In the last section we showed the CMakeLists.txt file for a simple console application. We will now extend it to create a GUI application that uses the Qt Widgets module.
This is the full project file:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.16) project(helloworld VERSION 1.0.0 LANGUAGES CXX) set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 17) set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED ON) find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Widgets) qt_standard_project_setup() add_executable(helloworld mainwindow.ui mainwindow.cpp main.cpp ) target_link_libraries(helloworld PRIVATE Qt6::Widgets) set_target_properties(helloworld PROPERTIES WIN32_EXECUTABLE ON MACOSX_BUNDLE ON )
Let's walk through the changes we have made.
find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Widgets)
In the find_package
call, we replace Core
with Widgets
. This will locate the Qt6Widgets
module and provide the Qt6::Widgets
targets we later link against.
Note that the application will still link against Qt6::Core
, because Qt6::Widgets
depends on it.
qt_standard_project_setup()
In addition to CMAKE_AUTOMOC
, qt_standard_project_setup sets the CMAKE_AUTOUIC
variable to ON
. This will
automatically create rules to invoke Qt's User Interface Compiler (uic) on .ui
source files.
add_executable(helloworld mainwindow.ui mainwindow.cpp main.cpp )
We add a Qt Designer file (mainwindow.ui
) and its corresponding C++ source file (mainwindow.cpp
) to the application target's sources.
target_link_libraries(helloworld PRIVATE Qt6::Widgets)
In the target_link_libraries
command, we link against Qt6::Widgets
instead of Qt6::Core
.
set_target_properties(helloworld PROPERTIES WIN32_EXECUTABLE ON MACOSX_BUNDLE ON )
Finally, we set properties on our application target with the following effects:
See the CMake Documentation for more information about these target properties.
Projects that contain more than just one target will benefit from a clear project file structure. We will use CMake's subdirectory feature.
As we plan to extend the project with more targets, we move the source files of the application into a subdirectory and create a new CMakeLists.txt
in there.
<project root> ├── CMakeLists.txt └── src └── app ├── CMakeLists.txt ├── main.cpp ├── mainwindow.cpp ├── mainwindow.h └── mainwindow.ui
The top-level CMakeLists.txt
contains the overall project setup, find_package
and add_subdirectory
calls:
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 3.16) project(helloworld VERSION 1.0.0 LANGUAGES CXX) set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD 17) set(CMAKE_CXX_STANDARD_REQUIRED ON) find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Widgets) qt_standard_project_setup() add_subdirectory(src/app)
Variables that are set in this file are visible in subdirectory project files.
The application's project file src/app/CMakeLists.txt
contains the executable target:
add_executable(helloworld mainwindow.ui mainwindow.cpp main.cpp ) target_link_libraries(helloworld PRIVATE Qt6::Widgets) set_target_properties(helloworld PROPERTIES WIN32_EXECUTABLE ON MACOSX_BUNDLE ON )
Such a structure will make it easy to add more targets to the project such as libraries or unit tests.
As the project grows, you may want to turn parts of your application code into a library that is used by the application and possibly unit tests. This section shows how to create such a library.
Our application currently contains business logic directly in main.cpp
. We extract the code into a new static library called businesslogic
in the subdirectory "src/businesslogic"
as
explained in the previous section.
For the sake of simplicity, the library consists of just one C++ source file and its corresponding header file that is included by the application's main.cpp
:
<project root> ├── CMakeLists.txt └── src ├── app │ ├── ... │ └── main.cpp └── businesslogic ├── CMakeLists.txt ├── businesslogic.cpp └── businesslogic.h
Let's have a look at the library's project file (src/businesslogic/CMakeLists.txt
).
add_library(businesslogic STATIC businesslogic.cpp ) target_link_libraries(businesslogic PRIVATE Qt6::Core) target_include_directories(businesslogic INTERFACE ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR})
Let's go through the content.
add_library(businesslogic STATIC businesslogic.cpp )
The add_library command creates the library businesslogic
. Later, we will let the application link against this target.
The STATIC
keyword denotes a static library. If we wanted to create a shared or dynamic library, we would use the SHARED
keyword.
target_link_libraries(businesslogic PRIVATE Qt6::Core)
We have a static library and don't actually have to link other libraries. But as our library uses classes from QtCore
, we add a link dependency to Qt6::Core
. This pulls in the necessary
QtCore
include paths and preprocessor defines.
target_include_directories(businesslogic INTERFACE ${CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR})
The library API is defined in the header file businesslogic/businesslogic.h
. By calling target_include_directories, we
make sure that the absolute path to the businesslogic
directory is automatically added as an include path to all targets using our library.
This frees us in main.cpp
from using relative paths to locate businesslogic.h
. Instead, we can just write
#include <businesslogic.h>
Last, we must add the library's subdirectory to the top-level project file:
add_subdirectory(src/app) add_subdirectory(src/businesslogic)
To use the library we created in the previous section, we instruct CMake to link against it:
target_link_libraries(helloworld PRIVATE businesslogic Qt6::Widgets)
This ensures that businesslogic.h
is found when main.cpp is compiled. Furthermore, the businesslogic static library will become a part of the helloworld
executable.
In CMake terms, the library businesslogic
specifies usage requirements (the include path) that every consumer of our library (the application) has to satisfy. The target_link_libraries
command takes care of that.
We want to display some images in our application, so we add them using the Qt Resource System.
qt_add_resources(helloworld imageresources PREFIX "/images" FILES logo.png splashscreen.png )
The qt_add_resources command automatically creates a Qt resource containing the referenced images. From the C++ source code, you can access the images by prepending the specified resource prefix:
logoLabel->setPixmap(QPixmap(":/images/logo.png"));
The qt_add_resources command takes as the first argument either a variable name or a target name. We recommend to use the target-based variant of this command as shown in the example above.
Translations of strings in a Qt project are encoded in .ts
files. See Internationalization with Qt for details.
To add .ts
files to your project, use the qt_add_translations command.
The following example adds a German and a French translation file to the helloworld
target:
qt_add_translations(helloworld TS_FILES helloworld_de.ts helloworld_fr.ts)
This creates build system rules to automatically generate .qm
files from the .ts
files. By default, the .qm
files are embedded into a resource and are accessible under the
"/i18n"
resource prefix.
To update the entries in the .ts
file, build the update_translations
target:
$ cmake --build . --target update_translations
To trigger the generation of the .qm
files manually, build the release_translations
target:
$ cmake --build . --target release_translations
For more information about how to influence the handling of .ts
files and the embedding into a resource, see the qt_add_translations
documentation.
The qt_add_translations command is a convenience wrapper. For more fine-grained control of how .ts
files and .qm
files are handled, use the underlying commands qt_add_lupdate and qt_add_lrelease.
The official CMake Documentation is an invaluable source for working with CMake.
The official CMake Tutorial covers common build system tasks.
The book Professional CMake: A Practical Guide provides a great introduction to the most relevant CMake features.