This command was introduced in Qt 6.2.
qt_target_qml_sources( target [QML_FILES ...] [RESOURCES ...] [PREFIX resource_path] [OUTPUT_TARGETS out_targets_var] [NO_LINT] [NO_CACHEGEN] [NO_QMLDIR_TYPES] )
If versionless commands are disabled, use qt6_target_qml_sources()
instead. It supports the same set of arguments as this command.
Note: This command requires CMake 3.19 or later.
qt_target_qml_sources()
provides the ability to add more files to a QML module after qt_add_qml_module() has been called. Typically, you pass the set
of .qml
files and resources to qt_add_qml_module() directly, but in some cases, it may be desirable, or even necessary, to add files after qt_add_qml_module() has been called. For example, you may wish to add files conditionally based on an if
statement expression, or from subdirectories that will
only be added if certain criteria are met. You might want to add a set of files with different characteristics to the others, such as a different resource prefix, or with linting and bytecode compilation disabled. The
qt_target_qml_sources()
command enables these scenarios.
The target
must be the backing target of a QML module, or if the QML module has no separate backing target, it must be the module's plugin target.
QML_FILES
is a list of .qml
, .js
and .mjs
files to be added to the QML module. This option has exactly the same effect as the QML_FILES
option of the qt_add_qml_module() command, including the automatic compilation to bytecode and lint processing.
The NO_CACHEGEN
and NO_LINT
options also have the same effect as they do for qt_add_qml_module(). They disable the bytecode compilation
and lint processing for the files listed with QML_FILES
. This behavior can also be specified just for individual files using source file
properties.
NO_QMLDIR_TYPES
prevents the QML_FILES
from being added as types to the generated qmldir file.
RESOURCES
has exactly the same effect as the RESOURCES
option of the qt_add_qml_module() command. It provides a list of files to be added
to the target
as ordinary resources. These files are typically things like images, shaders, etc. that the QML code refers to in some way.
Files added to the module via QML_FILES
or RESOURCES
will be placed under the same resource prefix and target path as they would if they were added by the qt_add_qml_module() command. This can be overridden by providing a different location with the PREFIX
option. The value following the PREFIX
keyword
will be used directly, without appending any target path. The final resource path of each file will be the prefix, plus the path of the file below the CMAKE_CURRENT_SOURCE_DIR
. The QT_RESOURCE_ALIAS source file property can also be used to override that relative path.
qt_add_qml_module(backing URI Example VERSION 1.0 RESOURCE_PREFIX /my.company.com/imports ) qt_target_qml_sources(backing QML_FILES special/First.qml RESOURCES icons/logo.png ) qt_target_qml_sources(backing PREFIX /other.company.com/debugging QML_FILES Inspector.qml )
In the above example, the backing
target's resources will end up with the following contents:
/my.company.com/imports/Example/special/First.qml
/my.company.com/imports/Example/icons/logo.png
/other.company.com/debugging/Inspector.qml
OUTPUT_TARGETS
is also analogous to the same option for qt_add_qml_module(). Use it to specify the name of a variable in which to store any additional
targets created for static builds. If the target
will be installed, these additional targets will also need to be installed to satisfy linking requirements.
A number of source file properties can be used to influence how each individual .qml
file is treated at various points in the QML module processing. These override any higher level options specified in calls to
qt_target_qml_sources()
or qt_add_qml_module(). All of these properties need to be set before the files are added with either of those two commands.
QT_QML_SKIP_QMLLINT
can be set to TRUE
on a source file to prevent it from being included in the automatic qmllint processing. By default, all
.qml
files will be included in the target's lint run, but this option can be used to exclude specific files.
QT_QML_SKIP_CACHEGEN
does a similar thing, preventing a source file from being compiled to byte code when this property is set to TRUE
. Note that the file will still be added to the
target
as a resource in uncompiled form (see Caching compiled QML sources).
Set the QT_QML_SKIP_QMLDIR_ENTRY
source file property to TRUE
to prevent that .qml
file from being added as a type to the QML module's typeinfo file (see Auto-generating qmldir
and typeinfo files). This would normally only be used for a file that does not expose a public type, such as a private JS file.
By default, when generating the qmldir
file, a single type entry will be generated for each .qml
file that provides a type. It will be
given a version number X.0
where X
is the major version of the QML module. If the QML module has any PAST_MAJOR_VERSIONS
set, the same pattern will be applied to those too, appending
X.0
for each past major version X
. For situations where a file needs to provide type entries for a different set of versions instead (e.g. it was first added in a minor patch version after the
.0
release), specify those versions in the source file's QT_QML_SOURCE_VERSIONS
property. One type entry will be created for each version.
If the type that a .qml
file provides is a singleton, set its QT_QML_SINGLETON_TYPE
property to TRUE
. Similarly, the file's QT_QML_INTERNAL_TYPE
source property can be set
to TRUE
to indicate that the type it provides is an internal one. The name of the type itself can also be overridden using the QT_QML_SOURCE_TYPENAME
property. All three of these will be reflected in
the file's type entries in the generated qmldir
file.
All files listed with QML_FILES
or RESOURCES
will be added to the target
's resources. Their location in the resources consists of a base point and a relative path. The base point
defaults to the concatenation of the QML module's resource prefix and its target path, but these can be overridden with the PREFIX argument. The relative path will default to
the path of the file relative to the target
's SOURCE_DIR
target property. This relative path can be overridden by setting the QT_RESOURCE_ALIAS
property on the source file. This is
commonly used to collect files from different directories and have them appear in the resources under a common location.
set_source_files_properties(nested/way/down/File.qml PROPERTIES QT_RESOURCE_ALIAS File.qml ) set_source_files_properties(TemplateFile.qml PROPERTIES QT_RESOURCE_ALIAS templates/File.qml QT_QML_SKIP_QMLDIR_ENTRY TRUE QT_QML_SKIP_QMLLINT TRUE QT_QML_SKIP_CACHEGEN TRUE ) set_source_files_properties(FunnySingleton.qml PROPERTIES QT_QML_SINGLETON_TYPE TRUE ) qt_add_qml_module(qt_target_qml_sources_example URI Example VERSION 2.3 RESOURCE_PREFIX /my.company.com/imports QML_FILES nested/way/down/File.qml TemplateFile.qml FunnySingleton.qml ) set_source_files_properties(some_old_thing.qml PROPERTIES QT_QML_SOURCE_VERSIONS "1.1;2.0" QT_QML_SOURCE_TYPENAME OldThing ) set_source_files_properties(../../../images/button-types.png PROPERTIES QT_RESOURCE_ALIAS button-types.png ) qt_target_qml_sources(qt_target_qml_sources_example QML_FILES some_old_thing.qml RESOURCES ../../../images/button-types.png doc/README.txt )
In the above example, the qt_target_qml_sources_example
target's resources will end up with the following contents:
/my.company.com/imports/Example/File.qml
/my.company.com/imports/Example/FunnySingleton.qml
/my.company.com/imports/Example/templates/File.qml
/my.company.com/imports/Example/some_old_thing.qml
/my.company.com/imports/Example/button-types.png
/my.company.com/imports/Example/doc/README.txt
The generated qmldir
file will contain the following type entries:
File 2.0 File.qml singleton FunnySingleton 2.0 FunnySingleton.qml OldThing 1.1 some_old_thing.qml OldThing 2.0 some_old_thing.qml
Note: The source FunnySingleton.qml file must already contain the pragma Singleton
statement. Setting the QT_QML_SINGLETON_TYPE
source property does not automatically generate the
pragma.
pragma Singleton
import QtQml
QtObject {}