Developing Qt
The Qt Project is a meritocratic consensus-based community interested in Qt. Anyone who shares that interest can join the community, participate in its decision making processes, and contribute to Qt’s development. The mailing-list for development of Qt (as opposed to developing with Qt) is development@qt-project.org Note, that you need to subscribe to the list before sending messages to it.
This wiki holds guidelines and documentation regarding code contributions to Qt. For an overview over all different ways to contribute to the Qt Project, please take a look at our "home page":http://qt.io.
Contributions
Things you generally need to know if you want to participate with code contributions.
- The Qt Governance Model
- Maintainers
- Qt Contribution Guidelines
- Contributing and Reviewing Code
- Commit Policy, Branches
- Submit Policies
- Qt Creator
- Plugins
- Creating New Modules or Tools for Qt
- QtWebKit
- Checklist for Qt 6.0 inclusion
- Merging breaking changes of internal API
Coding Guidelines
Things you need to know before you start writing Qt code.
- Qt Framework Qt Coding Style and Coding Conventions
- Qt Creator Coding Style & Conventions
- API Design Principles
- Binary Compatibility Workarounds
- Branch Guidelines
- Qt Localization
- Qt in Namespace
- Transition from Qt 4.x to Qt5
- Creating a new module or tool for Qt
- Project playground
- Naming guidelines
- Module repository structure
Tooling
Things you need to know before you submit your code.
Quality Engineering
Things you need to know to ensure good code quality.
Related Articles
- Git Installation
- Get the source
- Building Qt 5 from Git
- Developing and maintaining patches on top of Qt with Git