Integrating Qt 4.7.2 with Visual Studio 2010 - visual-studio

I am trying to add Qt 4.7.2 to my Visual Studio 2010. I downloaded the source code, changed the environment variables, ran a configure -no-webkit command (which ended successfully), and an nmake command (which also ended successfully). Afterwards, I installed the Qt Visual Studio Add-in 1.1.9. When in VS I go to Qt->Qt Options->Qt Versions and I add the current Qt Directory (4.7.2) it gives me this error:
This Qt version uses an unsupported makefile generator (used: MSBUILD, supported MSVC.NET)
What should I do? Thank you!
Also, I am running on Windows 7 x64 if that is of any help.
Edit: The problem appears only with VS Add-In 1.1.9. To solve simply install the 1.1.8 version. I found it on a Russian website. Works like a charm!

I did this yesterday, here's how:
Open up the Visual Studio Command Prompt, navigate to your Qt folder
execute "configure -platform win32-msvc2010 -debug-and-release -static -no-exceptions -no-accessibility -no-rtti -no-gif -no-libtiff -no-libjpeg -no-libmng -no-qt3support -no-openssl -no-dbus -no-phonon-backend -no-multimedia -no-audio-backend -no-script -no-scripttools -no-webkit"
(those were my options, you can of course change them)
execute nmake
add an environment variable named QTDIR with your Qt folder as value (had to do that because the add-in failed to do so)
now you can choose this folder to add a Qt version in the add-in

configure.exe -platform win32-msvc2010
will generate both a nmake makefile and a .sln file, build with either
you can also add
-no-webkit -no-phonon -no-phonon-backend -no-script -no-scripttools -no-qt3support -fast

Related

Specific the Visual C++ compiler in cmake [duplicate]

After installing Visual Studio 2015 and running CMake on a previous project, CMake errors stating that it could not find the C compiler.
The C compiler identification is unknown
The CXX compiler identification is unknown
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:4 (PROJECT):
No CMAKE_C_COMPILER could be found.
CMake Error at CMakeLists.txt:4 (PROJECT):
No CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER could be found.
I went searching for cl.exe in the Visual Studio folder,C:\Program Files\Microsoft Visual Studio 14.0, and could not find it.
How do I set up CMake to work on Windows with Visual Studio 2015?
I have found the solution. While the Visual Studio IDE installed successfully it did not install any build tools and therefore did not install the C++ compiler.
By attempting to manually create a C++ project in the Visual Studio 2015 GUI I was able to prompt it to download the C++ packages. CMake was then able to find the compiler without any difficulty.
Here is the solution that worked for me:
Open Visual Studio command prompt tool (as an administrator). On windows 10 it might be called 'Developer command prompt'.
Navigate to where you have the CMake executable
Run Cmake.exe
Proceed as usual to select build and source folder
Select the appropriate Visual Studio compiler and hit the configure button
Hopefully it should run without problems.
I looked in CMakeError.log file and found an error about cannot run 'rc.exe'
I searched and found this answer to copy RC.Exe and RcDll.Dll from the Microsoft SDKs bin to the VC bin, and then CMake worked.
Edit: The top answer to another question suggests that it's a PATH issue, so it could be enough to ensure the Microsoft SDK bin is in your PATH.
Those stumbling with this on Visual Studio 2017: there is a feature related to CMake that needs to be selected and installed together with the relevant compiler toolsets. See the screenshot below.
Make sure you are using the correct version of Visual Studio in the generator. I had incorrectly selected Visual Studio 15 when Visual Studio 14 installed.
If none of the above solutions worked, then stop and do a sanity check.
I got burned using the wrong -G <config> string and it gave me this misleading error.
First, run from the VS Command Prompt not the regular command prompt. You can find it in
Start Menu -> Visual Studio 2015 -> MSBuild Command Prompt for VS2015 This sets up all the correct paths to VS tools, etc.
Now see what generators are available from cmake...
cmake -help
...<snip>...
The following generators are available on this platform:
Visual Studio 15 [arch] = Generates Visual Studio 15 project files.
Optional [arch] can be "Win64" or "ARM".
Visual Studio 14 2015 [arch] = Generates Visual Studio 2015 project files.
Optional [arch] can be "Win64" or "ARM".
Visual Studio 12 2013 [arch] = Generates Visual Studio 2013 project files.
Optional [arch] can be "Win64" or "ARM".
Visual Studio 11 2012 [arch] = Generates Visual Studio 2012 project files.
Optional [arch] can be "Win64" or "ARM".
Visual Studio 10 2010 [arch] = Generates Visual Studio 2010 project files.
Optional [arch] can be "Win64" or "IA64".
...
Then chose the appropriate string with the [arch] added.
mkdir _build
cd _build
cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 15 Win64"
Running cmake in a subdirectory makes it easier to do a 'clean' since you can just delete everything in that directory.
I upgraded to Visual Studio 15 but wasn't paying attention and was trying to generate for 2012.
For me, I checked the CMakeError.log file and found:
[...] error MSB8036: The Windows SDK version 8.1 was not found. Install the required version of Windows SDK or change the SDK version in the project property pages or by right-clicking the solution and selecting "Retarget solution".
This is despite using Visual Studio 2017 on Windows 7. So it appears that CMake is trying to build its detection project with the Windows 8.1 SDK.
I used the Visual Studio installer to add that component and now CMake is happy as a clam.
Menu → Visual Studio 2015 → MSBuild Command Prompt for Visual Studio 2015. Then CMake can find cl.exe.
set PATH="c:\Program Files (x86)\Windows Kits\10\bin\10.0.16299.0\x64\";%PATH%
Change the upper path to where your Windows SDK is installed.
CMake can find rc.exe.
cd to the path of CMakeLists.txt and do:
md .build
cd .build
cmake .. -G "Visual Studio 14 2015 Win64" -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release
cmake --build .
The param after -G should be fetched by CMake. Use --help; you may or may not have the generator.
I ran into the same issue and fixed it by relaunching the Visual Studio Install and checking the following option:
Windows and Web Development / Universal Windows App Development Tools / Windows 10 SDK
It contains the standard C++ headers used in most applications and therefore it is often necessary to install it as well.
I had this issue under Windows 10 when using Visual Studio 2015 Professional, while Visual Studio 2015 Express worked! Under Windows 7, both Visual Studio versions used to work.
New projects created from the Visual Studio 2015 Professional IDE successfully compile, but CMake would fail to find the compiler reporting:
The C compiler identification is unknown
The CXX compiler identification is unknown
I upgraded CMake from 3.4.1 to 3.11.4, and now the problem is gone.
If you are on Visual Studio 2017 you need at least CMake 3.8!
I had a similar problem with the Visual Studio 2017 project generated through CMake. Some of the packages were missing while installing Visual Studio in Desktop development with C++. See snapshot:
Visual Studio 2017 Packages:
Also, upgrade CMake to the latest version.
Checking CMakeErrors.log in CMakeFiles returned:
C:\Program Files
(x86)\MSBuild\Microsoft.Cpp\v4.0\V140\Platforms\x64\PlatformToolsets\v140_xp\Toolset.targets(36,5): warning MSB8003: Could not find WindowsSdkDir_71A variable from the
registry. TargetFrameworkVersion or PlatformToolset may be set to an
invalid version number.
The error means that the build tools for XP (v140_xp) are not installed. To fix it I installed the proper feature in Visual Studio 2019 installer under Individual Components tab:
I was running old cmake version (i.e. 3.8) and I'm using visual studio 16 - 2019. After updating my cmake version, it did detect the compiler.
In my case there was an environment variable set which was the reason for this error.
The problem was solved after deleting cxx_flags from the environment variables.
I got this problem with CMake 3.12.1, after an update of Visual Studio 2017. I simply re-ran CMake and it worked.
In my case I could see in the CMakeError.log that CMake could not find the Windows SDK (MSB8003: Could not find WindowsSDKDir variable from the registry).
The version can be specified on the commandline on the first CMake run using:
-DCMAKE_VS_WINDOWS_TARGET_PLATFORM_VERSION=
I got further after setting that, but I hit more issues later (so I assume my environment is messed up somehow), but maybe it will help someone with this issue.
A couple of tips:
Try to set the path manually by checking 'advanced' and modifying CMAKE_LINKER and CMAKE_MAKE_PROGRAM
Delete the cache - in the CMake with GUI go to:
File → Delete Cache.
My problem was a combination of previously stated: I have set the compiler version to 15 instead of 14 and when corrected, I had to delete the cache.
I also started the Visual Studio command prompt as an administrator and from there I ran the cmake-gui.exe
Then everything worked as it was supposed to.
In my case the issue was that the parent project, which is including googletest via
add_subdirectory(gtest_dir)
was defined as
PROJECT( projname CXX )
Somehow, CMake does not recognize
PROJECT(sub_project_name CXX C)
since the C compiler is not set in the parent.
I solved the issue by using
PROJECT( projname CXX C)
in my main CMakeLists.txt file.
This might be another solution for those with the latest Windows 10 creator version:
Stack Overflow post Fatal error LNK1104: cannot open file 'gdi32.lib'
None of the previous solutions worked for me. However I noticed that although I installed Visual Studio version 15 (not to be confused with Visual Studio 2015) the directory created on my computer was for Visual Studio 14.
When I specified Visual Studio 14 when I pressed the configuration button it worked.
i found this sollution at stackoverflow and i work for me although not working other sollutions
if you have a windows 10 OS, doing the following steps will fix the problem:
1) go to C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft SDKs\Windows\v7.1A\Bin
2) then copy RC.exe and RcDll from this file
3) go to C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 14.0\VC\bin and paste the two files you have copied into it.
thats all i hope it is helpful...
Look in the Cmakelists.txt if you find ARM you need to install C++ for ARM and as well vcvarsall.bat use for ARM bin folder.
It's these packages:
C++ Universal Windows Platform for ARM64 "Not Required"
Visual C++ Compilers and libraries for ARM "Not Required"
Visual C++ Compilers and libraries for ARM64 "Very Likely Required"
Required for finding Threads on ARM
enable_language(C)
enable_language(CXX)
Then the problems might disappear:
No CMAKE_C_COMPILER could be found.
No CMAKE_CXX_COMPILER could be found.
If above does not resolve your problem?
Optionally you can remove the options C and CXX in cmakelists.txt by setting # infront of where the enable_language(C) is. And avoid Android ARM processor compilation.
Resolved by adding the missing component
Modify->continue add as follow
I had a related problem: the Visual C++ generators were not even on the list when running cmake --help.
I ran where cmake in console and found that cygwin also provides its own cmake.exe file, which was being used. Changing the order of directories in PATH fixed the problem.
I had this issue with CMake GUI and the VS 21019 Community Edition. I think I may have installed CMake before Visual Studio - certainly after I updated CMake 3.15.2 to 3.15.3 the problem went away.
Check name folder too long or not.
This question is old, but none of the solutions here were working for me. I'm using Visual Studio 2019, and in my case, C++ compilation was working but just broke one day.
However, I noticed that there was an update ready to be installed in the Visual Studio Installer.
After installing that update, rebooting my computer, and relaunching Visual Studio, all of the C++ CMake problems disappeared. I'm not quite sure why this fixed it, and I can only speculate, but I can only assume that one of two things occurred. Either installing that update fixed a broken installation, or the update was quietly downloaded and prepared in the background, breaking things in the process.
I met the same issue in VSCode Cmake extension, i solve it by check following two options:
In the end, click [Scan for kits]
cmake --no-warn-unused-cli -DCMAKE_EXPORT_COMPILE_COMMANDS:BOOL=TRUE -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE:STRING=Debug "-DCMAKE_C_COMPILER:FILEPATH=C:\Program Files\mingw-w64\x86_64-8.1.0-posix-seh-rt_v6-rev0\mingw64\bin\gcc.exe" "-DCMAKE_CXX_COMPILER:FILEPATH=C:\Program Files\mingw-w64\x86_64-8.1.0-posix-seh-rt_v6-rev0\mingw64\bin\g++.exe" -Hc:/code -Bc:/code/build -G "MinGW Makefiles"

how to let qt msvc2013 make command runnable

I don't know how to do this with msvc.
I succeeded when I used mingw.
I have to use make and make install in the command line because I want to use QtXlsxWriter which is a module.
I installed visual studio 2013 and Qt 5.5.1 VS 2013 only
Visual Studio has nmake instead of make. You also need Perl. Strawberry Perl may be used here:
Start Visual Studio command prompt
Set the PATH variable to point to Perl and Qt binary folders, for example: PATH=c:\Strawberry\perl\bin;c:\Qt5.5.1\5.5\msvc2013_64\bin;%PATH%
go to QtXlsxWriter folder
qmake
nmake
nmake install
Assuming you have a .pro Qt project file.
You can generate a makefile with qmake and compile it with nmake:
qmake
nmake
You can open it in QtCreator IDE and build from there directly.
You can generate Visual Studio IDE project file (.vcxproj):
qmake -tp vc
and
either open it in Visual Studio and build from there
or
build it from command line with msbuild:
msbuild projectname.vcxproj
qmake: Creates Makefile from qtxlsx.pro
make: Builds Makefile
Bullsit, sorry. There is no make in the Windows build system.

QT QSqlDatabase, Add to Visual Studio Project

I am looking for direction on how I might include the QT ODBC source in my Visual Studio 2010 executable. My project requires a modification of the SQLResult class and prefer to include the source in my application instead of linking in the object configure -static.
FWIW: I am a registered Enterprise user with a valid license.
Many thanks!
This is what I did... I do hope that these steps are useful to others.
My Environment: Visual Studio 2010 Ultimate
Download build from QT
Extract Build to directory...
C:\Qt\qt-everywhere-enterprise-src-5.2.1\
For each (x86/x64) platforms:
Program \Visual Studio Tools \ command prompt
create directory for QT platform
In my case: c:\qt\x86 and c:\qt\x64
Set the environment path to QT base:
QTDIR=C:\Qt\x86\qt-everywhere-enterprise-src-5.2.1\qtbase
At the command prompt:
set PATH=%CD%\qtbase\bin;%PATH%
Include any modules: Note -static
configure -static -prefix %CD%\qtbase -qt-sql-odbc -opengl desktop
nmake
For sql plug in:
cd src/sql
Create a VSProj file and include in your project.
qmake -tp vc
In Visual Studio ensure the VS Addin is installed on the system. At the VS Menu Qt5 menu. Selection options. Create a build
to associate the VS addin to.
c/C++ hive
General Additional Include:
.\GeneratedFiles;.;$(QTDIR)\include;
.\GeneratedFiles\$(ConfigurationName);
$(QTDIR)\include\QtCore;
$(QTDIR)\include\QtGui;
$(QTDIR)\include\QtSql;
$(QTDIR)\include\QtWidgets;
$(QTDIR)\include\QtNetwork;
$(QTDIR)\include\QtConcurrent;
.\header;
$(QTDIR)\plugins\platforms;
%(AdditionalIncludeDirectories)
Ensure all libraries are referenced in VS Project properties\linker\input\additional dependencies
Linker \ General \ Additional Library Directories
$(QTDIR)\lib;$(QTDIR)\plugins\platforms;%(AdditionalLibraryDirectories)

Not able to build qt5 in release

I'm buiding QT 5 with Visual Studio 2010 because i need to have debug symbols.
I use the following commands:
configure -debug-and-release -force-debug-info -platform win32-msvc2010 -opensource -mp
nmake
But it seems that QT was built only in debug mode, because i can see only *d.dll files in qtbase/bin and qtbase/lib folders.
When i try to build sample qt project, it goes ok in debug.
But in release i get the following error:
1>LINK : fatal error LNK1181: cannot open input file 'qtmain.lib'
This file is indeed absent in my QT folder.
I also tried "-release" instead of "-debug-and-release" and it also created debug libraries instead of release.
I build Qt5.0.2 with configure -developer-build -opensource -nomake examples -nomake tests
In detail:
Install strawbey perl (http://strawberryperl.com/)
Install Windows SDK http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows/desktop/aa904949 even when you are using Windows 7. On older versions of Microsoft Windows the DirectX SDK should be installed.
Download Qt 5.0.2 source code from http://qt-project.org/downloads
Start “Open VS2012 x64 Native Tools Command Prompt“
Make sure that python is available on the command prompt. When installing Python you can add python.exe to the environment path. (I used python 3.3)
Switch to Qt 5.0.2 source directory (directory which contains configure.bat)
Run configure -developer-build -opensource -nomake examples -nomake tests
and afterwards
nmake
Here (How To Compile Qt with Visual Studio) is a guide for building Qt on VS2010. In the comments to that article, there are instructions for building Qt 5, here.

Building Opensource Qt for Visual Studio 2005/2008

Does anyone have instructions on building the opensource version of Qt? Now that the repository is opened up, I'm trying to build for VS2008 but I'm getting errors when it tries to build qmake.
I found the question I'm looking to use Visual Studio to write and compile using the open source version of Qt4 but this information is out of date, and doesn't really help me. For reference, here's what happens when I try to build with configure -platform win32-msvc2008
Microsoft (R) Program Maintenance Utility Version 9.00.30729.01
Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.
cl -c -Foproject.obj -W3 -nologo -O2 -I. -Igenerators -Igenerators\unix -Igenerators\win32 -Igenerators\mac -
IC:\dev\open_source\qt\include -IC:\dev\open_source\qt\include\QtCore -IC:\dev\open_source\qt\include -IC:\dev\open_sou
rce\qt\include\QtCore -IC:\dev\open_source\qt\src\corelib\global -IC:\dev\open_source\qt\include\QtScript -IC:\dev\op
en_source\qt\mkspecs\win32-msvc2008 -DQT_NO_TEXTCODEC -DQT_NO_UNICODETABLES -DQT_LITE_COMPONENT -DQT_NODLL -DQT_NO_STL
-DQT_NO_COMPRESS -DUNICODE -DHAVE_QCONFIG_CPP -DQT_BUILD_QMAKE -DQT_NO_THREAD -DQT_NO_QOBJECT -DQT_NO_GEOM_VARIANT -D
QT_NO_DATASTREAM -DQT_NO_PCRE -DQT_BOOTSTRAPPED -DQMAKE_OPENSOURCE_EDITION project.cpp
project.cpp
c:\dev\open_source\qt\src\corelib\tools\qstringlist.h(45) : fatal error C1083: Cannot open include file: 'QtCore/qalgori
thms.h': No such file or directory
NMAKE : fatal error U1077: '"C:\Program Files (x86)\Microsoft Visual Studio 9.0\VC\BIN\cl.EXE"' : return code '0x2'
Stop.
Building qmake failed, return code 2
Well, one helpful thing is to run configure inside the Visual Studio Command Prompt. That should be available in the Visual Studio start menu group under Visual Studio Tools.
Also now when you run configure you don't have to specify target platform, because it will be set as an environment variable by the VS Command Prompt.
I got errors from configure and nmake when I did not use the VS Command Prompt, and since switching I have not had any issues.
So the simple instructions would be:
1) open VS command prompt
2) navigate to qt folder where configure.exe is located
3) configure
4) nmake
Please, ensure that you have ActiveState Perl installed
This blog article seems to have more recent information on building Qt with visual studio. Hope it helps.
Note that Nokia, as of Qt 4.6, is now providing their own open source VS builds of Qt, so it is no longer necessary to build from source yourself to do development with Visual Studio. Access their open source download page, and look for builds named (e.g.) qt-win-opensource-4.6.1-vs2008.exe.
Also, if you simply want to compile with MSVC so you can develop with the open source libraries with visual studio, I put together a project to provide "pre-built" Qt LGPL libraries with MSVC 2008.
It might be helpfull and has the advantages of taking up less space then compiling it yourself. It also provides a command prompt with all your environment variables set up for you and a link to launch Visual Studio with a Qt environment. It's called qt-msvc-installer.
What user156973 said. Install ActiveState perl and run configure again.

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