Visual Studio Add-in: Difference between revisions

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===Build the Qt Visual Studio Tools===
===Build the Qt Visual Studio Tools===


Change the directory into 'src' and run 'qmake && make' (or 'mingw32-make', 'nmake' ...) to build
After cloning the repository, follow the instructions below to build the Qt Visual Studio Tools.
the Qt Visual Studio Tools command line applications. Once finished, open the solution QtVsTools.sln
 
in Visual Studio and build the solution.
====Requirements====
 
The following is required in order to build the Qt Visual Studio solution:
 
* Visual Studio 2017, 2019 or 2022, with the following workloads:
** Desktop development with C++
**.NET desktop development
**[https://docs.microsoft.com/en-us/visualstudio/extensibility/installing-the-visual-studio-sdk Visual Studio extension development]
* [https://devblogs.microsoft.com/cppblog/linux-development-with-c-in-visual-studio/ Linux development with C++]
* [https://github.com/microsoft/vswhere vswhere tool] (usually installed with Visual Studio):
** [https://github.com/microsoft/vswhere/releases/tag/2.7.1 Version 2.7.1] or greater.
* Git must be installed and included in the PATH environment variable.
 
====Environment variables====
 
Set environment variables in the format QTBUILD_STATIC_VS<version> according to the installed VS versions:
* QTBUILD_STATIC_VS2017 = <path to Qt installation built with msvc2017>
* QTBUILD_STATIC_VS2019 = <path to Qt installation built with msvc2019>
* QTBUILD_STATIC_VS2022` = <path to Qt installation built with msvc2022>
 
For example, if Qt is installed in C:\build, the following environment variables must be set:
 
    QTBUILD_STATIC_VS2019=C:\build\qt_5.12.9_msvc2019_x86
    QTBUILD_STATIC_VS2022=C:\build\qt_5.12.9_msvc2022_x64
 
====Initialization====
 
In a command prompt (a "regular" one, *not* a VS Developer/Native Tools prompt), `CD` to the
root of the repository and run `vstools.bat` to initialize the solution and open it in Visual
Studio, with the following arguments:
 
    C:\...\vstools> vstools -init -startvs
 
This will:
* Delete all output files
* Restore NuGet packages
* Run an initial text template generation
* Open the solution in the VS IDE, ready to build/debug
 
This procedure must be repeated when opening the solution on another version of VS. For example, assuming VS 2022 and VS 2019 are installed, to open the solution in VS 2019 after it has already been initialized and used in VS 2022, run the following:
 
    C:\...\vstools> vstools -vs2019 -init -startvs
 
By default, if no VS version is specified, the most recent version is selected.
 
====Target platform====
 
The solution platform must be set to 'x64' for VS 2022, and 'x86'
or 'Any CPU' for VS 2019 and VS 2017.


===Build the Qt Visual Studio Tools documentation===
===Build the Qt Visual Studio Tools documentation===

Revision as of 09:27, 7 December 2021

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French translators see also: http://qt-devnet.developpez.com/tutoriels/add-in-visual-studio/compiler/

Qt Visual Studio Tools

The Qt Visual Studio Tools integrate the Qt development tools into Microsoft Visual Studio. This enables developers to use the standard Windows development environment without having to worry about Qt-related build steps or tools.

Get the sources

Use Git to check out the Qt Visual Studio Tools sources that are hosted at: http://code.qt.io/cgit/qt-labs/vstools.git

To create a repository clone, execute one of the following commands:

git clone git://code.qt.io/qt-labs/vstools.git
git clone https://code.qt.io/qt-labs/vstools.git

Contribute changes

Contributions to the Qt Visual Studio Tools project must be submitted to the qt-labs/vstools Gerrit repository. For instructions on how to set up a Gerrit account and contribute to Qt projects, see Setting up Gerrit.

Install Qt

To build the Qt Visual Studio Tools, an installation of Qt is required. The version of Qt that is currently supported is 5.12.9. Either build Qt from the sources available in the Qt Project Git Repository Browser or install a pre-built binary package.

Build Qt from sources

See Building Qt 5 from Git for the prerequisites and steps to build Qt from sources.

Recommended options for the configure tool:

configure -static -opensource -confirm-license -nomake examples -nomake tests -opengl desktop

Recommended options for Jom:

jom module-qtbase module-qtdeclarative

32-bit or 64-bit

Visual Studio 2022 is a 64-bit application, whereas VS 2019 and 2017 are 32-bit applications. The target platform for which Qt is built must reflect this:

  • For Visual Studio 2022, use Qt built for the x64 platform.
  • For Visual Studio 2019, use Qt built for the x86 platform.
  • For Visual Studio 2017, use Qt built for the x86 platform.

Build the Qt Visual Studio Tools

After cloning the repository, follow the instructions below to build the Qt Visual Studio Tools.

Requirements

The following is required in order to build the Qt Visual Studio solution:

Environment variables

Set environment variables in the format QTBUILD_STATIC_VS<version> according to the installed VS versions:

  • QTBUILD_STATIC_VS2017 = <path to Qt installation built with msvc2017>
  • QTBUILD_STATIC_VS2019 = <path to Qt installation built with msvc2019>
  • QTBUILD_STATIC_VS2022` = <path to Qt installation built with msvc2022>

For example, if Qt is installed in C:\build, the following environment variables must be set:

   QTBUILD_STATIC_VS2019=C:\build\qt_5.12.9_msvc2019_x86
   QTBUILD_STATIC_VS2022=C:\build\qt_5.12.9_msvc2022_x64

Initialization

In a command prompt (a "regular" one, *not* a VS Developer/Native Tools prompt), `CD` to the root of the repository and run `vstools.bat` to initialize the solution and open it in Visual Studio, with the following arguments:

   C:\...\vstools> vstools -init -startvs

This will:

  • Delete all output files
  • Restore NuGet packages
  • Run an initial text template generation
  • Open the solution in the VS IDE, ready to build/debug

This procedure must be repeated when opening the solution on another version of VS. For example, assuming VS 2022 and VS 2019 are installed, to open the solution in VS 2019 after it has already been initialized and used in VS 2022, run the following:

   C:\...\vstools> vstools -vs2019 -init -startvs

By default, if no VS version is specified, the most recent version is selected.

Target platform

The solution platform must be set to 'x64' for VS 2022, and 'x86' or 'Any CPU' for VS 2019 and VS 2017.

Build the Qt Visual Studio Tools documentation

Run 'qmake && make docs' (or 'mingw32-make docs', 'nmake docs' ...) from the root directory to build the Qt Visual Studio Tools documentation. You need to have 'qdoc' and friends built already. See the Qt documentation for the prerequisites and steps to build Qt documentation from sources. https://wiki.qt.io/Building_Qt_Documentation

How to debug the Qt Visual Studio Tools

To debug the resulting VSIX, select the 'QtVsTools' node, right click and choose 'Properties|Debug'. Update 'Start Action|Start external program:' to point to your Visual Studio 'devenv.exe' application. Update 'Start Options|Command line arguments:' with '/rootSuffix Exp'. Note: The implemented post build targets will only work reliable if you use the 'Exp' hive of Visual Studio.

How to locally test the Qt Visual Studio Tools update

Inside the src\config directory, edit the qt.io.xml file and modify the following tags:

   <updated>2016-11-11T10:51:55Z</updated>   Use the current date and time, keep the 'T' and 'Z'
   <id>{ Product ID }</id>                   Set to the Product ID that can be found in the 'source.extension.vsixmanifest' file,
                                             for example: <id>QtVsTools.30112013-cd02-4fd0-89bd-e36f85abe16a</id>
   <Version>{ Version }</Version>            Set to the Version that can be found in the 'source.extension.vsixmanifest' file,
                                             for example: <Version>2.0.0</Version>

Copy the XML file and the VSIX package inside a new folder side by side and open the 'Tools | Options | Extensions and Updates' settings dialog in Visual Studio. Add a new entry in the Additional Extension Gallery, like this:

   Name: qt.io
   Url: file://path/to/your/atom.xml