Difference between revisions of "Qt Quick development process"
(→Compiling GCompris for Mac OS X) |
(→Compiling GCompris for Mac OS X) |
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$ cd GCompris-qt<br> | $ cd GCompris-qt<br> | ||
$ git submodule init && git submodule update<br> | $ git submodule init && git submodule update<br> | ||
− | |||
$ export Qt5_DIR=$HOME/Qt5.7.0/5.7/clang_64/lib/cmake/Qt5/<br> | $ export Qt5_DIR=$HOME/Qt5.7.0/5.7/clang_64/lib/cmake/Qt5/<br> | ||
(This path would vary with your Qt5 folder location)<br> | (This path would vary with your Qt5 folder location)<br> | ||
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$ cd build<br> | $ cd build<br> | ||
$ cmake ..<br> | $ cmake ..<br> | ||
− | |||
If you see '''errors with 'Box2D'''', make with this command:<br> | If you see '''errors with 'Box2D'''', make with this command:<br> | ||
$ cmake -DQML_BOX2D_MODULE=disabled ..<br> | $ cmake -DQML_BOX2D_MODULE=disabled ..<br> |
Revision as of 21:29, 19 August 2016
Learning Qt Quick
Some pointers to discover Qt Quick:
A step by step exercise to dig into Qt Quick with the QtCreator development environment:
Coding Style
We follow this coding style.
Source code
Here is the official repository for the source code. Alternatively you can also get the code on GitHub.
Compilation prerequisites
For Debian based systems, in order to compile GCompris you need to install the following packages:
Compilation chain
sudo apt-get install cmake
sudo apt-get install cmake-curses-gui # Optional
sudo apt-get install g++
sudo apt-get install libgl1-mesa-dev
Qt5
sudo apt-get install qt5-default
sudo apt-get install qtdeclarative5-dev
sudo apt-get install qtmultimedia5-dev
sudo apt-get install libqt5svg5-dev
sudo apt-get install libqt5xmlpatterns5-dev
sudo apt-get install libqt5sensors5-dev
sudo apt-get install qml-module-qtquick-particles2
sudo apt-get install qttools5-dev-tools
Compilation
CMake is a cross-platform free software program for managing the build process of software using a compiler-independent method. The minimum version to compile GCompris is 2.8.
- Get the source code:
git clone git://anongit.kde.org/gcompris.git
- Initialize the git submodule(s)
cd gcompris git submodule init && git submodule update
- Download and Install the latest stable version of Qt for Android (This includes QtCreator in the Tools/QtCreator directory)
- Start QtCreator and open the project file CMakeLists.txt at the root of the source code
- Create a build directory and set it in Qt Creator
- Compile and run it. (No need of giving any arguments to CMake, if QtCreator asks for it)
To compile from the command line you need:
- export Qt5_DIR=$HOME/Qt/5.4.2/5.4/lib/cmake/Qt5
- mkdir build
- cd build
- cmake ..
- make
To make it run on Android you need first to follow these instructions.
Generate core API documentation
KDE uses kapidox, a wrapper around doxygen to generate API documentation. Kapidox uses doxyqml for generating documentation for QML code.
In GCompris we document all classes in the src/core/ directory.
To build this API documentation you need:
- Install doxygen.
- Build kapidox from http://quickgit.kde.org/?p=kapidox.git
- Install doxyqml from https://github.com/agateau/doxyqml. (Note: need at least version 0.2.0 that supports readonly QML properties.)
Then do
kgenapidox ./path/to/gcompris-checkout/
and find your documentation under apidocs/.
Adding a new activity
Automatically
Let's say you want to port the algebra_by activity.
cd src/activities ./createit.sh algebra_by
And you're done, you can run CMake again in QtCreator and your activity should appear on the list.
Manually
You must create a directory for your activity in src/activities. In it, create an ActivityInfo.qml, CMakeLists.txt and your qml entry point AlgebraBy.qml.
- in src/activities/activities.txt add the directory name of your activity (keep the file sorted).
- check algebra_by/ActivityInfo.qml that the name references you Qml activity entry point and that the icon point to your icon name (preferred format is svg).
If your activity is an existing one, you can move its ported ActivityInfo and icon:
git mv tools/menus/algebra_by.qml src/activities/algebra_by/AlgebraBy.qml git mv tools/menus/resource/algebra_by.svg src/activities/algebra_by/algebra_by
Extending another activity
If the activity is just an extension of an existing one you have to create it either manually or automatically and then change you .qml file to extend another one. The 'erase_clic' activity is a good example.
In your .qml file:
- just import the activity you want to extend with for example: import "qrc:/gcompris/src/activities/erase"
- instead of have your root item being an 'ActivityBase' you just create an object of the base type you want to extend like Erase.
- Use a property to pass parameters to your base item and customize it
Coding guidelines
Keep only small Javascript in the QML code, all the game logic must be in your Javascript file. This makes it easier to read the activity logic. It is possible to have several Javascript files if needed. The QML files must be seen as the graphical interface description and the Javascript the logic of the game.
Resolution independence
Your activity must look nice on tablets and desktops. The resolution and dpi value may differ a lot.
Images and Graphics
On mobile with high dpi the size of your images and graphics will look smaller. You must set an initial size related to ApplicationInfo.ratio like this:
Image { id: ball source: "qrc:/gcompris/src/activities/ballcatch/resource/ball.svg" sourceSize.height: 100 * ApplicationInfo.ratio }
Fonts
The situation for fonts is comparable. The font.pointSize property of Text-like QML elements handles device independence to a certain degree. An exception are devices with relativ low-dpi and a high resolution (i.e. many tablet devices >= 10'), where fonts are rendered too small when using pointSize.
For this case we use calculated constant ApplicationInfo.fontRatio, that must be used a factor to a font.pointSize value. This is done automatically when the size is set via the fontSize property of the GCFont type, which is the recommended way to specify font-sizes. Example:
GCText { id: text text: "Text" fontSize: 14 font.weight: Font.DemiBold color: "white" }
You can also use the internal pseudo enum values of GCText, that specify some often used font-sizes:
readonly property int tinySize: 10.0 readonly property int smallSize: 12.0 readonly property int regularSize: 14.0 readonly property int mediumSize: 16.0 readonly property int largeSize: 24.0 readonly property int hugeSize: 32.0
GCText { ... fontSize: regularSize ... }
Window resize
Your activity must adapt its content properly when the window is resized.
Screen rotation
Your activity must support screen rotation. If you use a layout or you specify an item coordinated related to the window width you are safe. If you create absolute coordinate items, you may need to reset them when the screen is changed. To detect a rotation you can add a code like this in your ActivityBase:
onWidthChanged: Activity.widthChanged()
Audio
Creating Audio items is rather slow. If you have a lot of items on the screen, do not create an Audio item for each. Instead create a single Audio and pass it to all your items.
In order to play audio only if audio has been enabled in the preferences, use the core GCAudio item instead of Audio. Make sure to use import "../../core".
Background image
You must not use a background image to bring useful informations. It is not possible to keep the background aligned with items when the resolution is changed.
Adding a configuration for a specific activity
Each activity can have a specific configuration (for example, changing the locale of the activity, having different modes...). A simple example can be found on Traffic activity where you can change between images and colors to display the cars.
To add configuration, you need to add the "config" value in the Bar. Then you have to add a DialogActivityConfig item where you will define the component item of the dialog. You need to define the following functions:
- setDefaultValues to set the values when displaying the configuration.
- onLoadData which is called to load the existing data from configuration.
- onSaveData which is called to save the configuration in configuration file and where you can also send signals to dynamically change current activity settings.
The data should be set in "dataToSave" attribute which is a map (pairs of key, values) where the keys are strings and values are javascript var (can be strings, lists...).
Accessing the component items can be done using: dialogActivityConfig.configItem.
For the data to be loaded at start of activity, you also need to call "dialogActivityConfig.getInitialConfiguration()" on Component.onCompleted() of your pageComponent item.
Compiling GCompris for Desktop
You can still use QtCreator to develop. Within it, open the CMakeLists.txt on top-level of GCompris. Select a directory (create a folder at same level as the gcompris folder for example) and then click on "Run CMake" button then finish.
To compile GCompris on command line, you can create a directory GCompris-qt-build at same level as the gcompris folder, go into it and type "cmake ../gcompris && make". You have the possibility to check which activities you want to compile or not.
If you want to create an auto extractible package for linux platforms, you need to launch cmake using: "cmake -DBUILD_STANDALONE=ON ../gcompris && make".
Troubleshooting
- If you get the error: "The imported target "Qt5::Gui" references the file "Qt5Gui_EGL_LIBRARY-NOTFOUND" but this file does not exist."
sudo apt-get install libgl1-mesa-glx
try again If this still shows the same error or tells you - /usr/bin/ld: cannot find -lGL - do :
on a 32 bits system cd /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu sudo ln -s /usr/lib/i386-linux-gnu/mesa/libGL.so.1 libGL.so on a 64 bits system cd /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu sudo ln -s /usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/mesa/libGL.so.1 libGL.so
- If you miss the GL/gl.h header, install it with sudo apt-get install mesa-common-dev
- If you get the error: "The imported target "Qt5::Gui" references the file "Qt5Gui_EGL_LIBRARY-NOTFOUND" but this file does not exist."
Compiling GCompris for Android
You need first to install ant (java tool) from your favorite package manager. Then install openjdk (for example it could be openjdk-8-jdk from your favorite package manager).
Then you need to download and install android ndk (NDK) and android sdk (SDK).
You also need to install the KDE extra-cmake-modules dependency (apt-get install extra-cmake-modules).
To make it easier and because we don't need eclipse contained in adt-bundle-linux-x86-xxxxx, copy the directory sdk under for example ~/Android/ and rename it as android-sdk. Also, rename android-ndk-r9d as android-ndk and copy it under ~/Android/
The Android SDK you have downloaded does not contain yet an Android platform or any third-party libraries. In fact. In order to start developing applications, you must install the Platform-tools and at least one version of the Android platform, using the SDK Manager. To start the SDK Manager, please execute the program "android". Please read SDK Readme.txt under android-sdk to get more precise informations.
Then you need to add some environment variables by editing ~/.bashrc to add at the end (put the directories where you installed ndk/sdk):
export ANDROID_NDK=~/Android/android-ndk export ANDROID_NDK_ROOT=$ANDROID_NDK export ANDROID_SDK_ROOT=~/Android/android-sdk export PATH=$PATH:~/Android/android-sdk/platform-tools export Qt5_android=~/Qt5.5.1/5.5/android_armv7/
It may be possible that ccmake tells you that sdk version is not installed for its version 19. Go then to ~/Android/android-sdk/tools/ then start the shell program ./android. Install Kitkat 4.4.1.
With Qt5.3, you'll probably need to create symbolic links for Qt libraries (if you have the error Qt5.3.0/5.3/android_armv7/lib/libQt5Core.so.5.3.0 not found):
cd Qt5.3.0/5.3/android_armv7/lib for f in $(ls *.so); do ln -s $f $f.5.3.0; done
(At this point, if you do not find the directory android_armv7, you may have downloaded the wrong qt setup file. You have probably downloaded Qt 5.5.1 for Linux instead of Qt 5.5.1 for Android)
Create a folder at the same level as the gcompris folder and into it type "ccmake -DQt5_DIR=${Qt5_android} -DCMAKE_TOOLCHAIN_FILE=/usr/share/ECM/toolchain/Android.cmake -Wno-dev ../gcompris_developers/ && make && make apk_debug" to get a GCompris apk. This opens ccmake which is a console application. Run the configuration step by typing "C" on you keyboard.
If it tells you "Could not find a package configuration file provided by Qt5", press "e" to set the path for Qt5_DIR. To do this, press "enter", this will place the cursor on the first path line. With the down key go to Qt5_DIR line, press again "Enter" then modify the path. For example the path can be: /home/myname/Qt5.3.0/5.3/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5 where Qt5.3.0 is the Qt installation directory.
Then press "G" to build and "E" to quit.
Problems which could occurs while using ccmake:
- ccmake is telling you that it does not find opengl (qopengl.h:122:21: fatal error: GL/gl.h: No such file or directory) : you are maybe pointing to the wrong path. You are pointing to the qt5 desktop library instead of pointing to the arm libraries: You have maybe pointed to /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/gcc/lib/cmake/Qt5Core/ when you should point to /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5Core.
- ccmake is telling you that it does not find ANDROID_DEPLOY_QT: You are maybe pointing to /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/bin you have to point to the androiddeployqt file /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/bin/androiddeployqt
This is how ccmake could looks like once started:
ANDROID_ABI armeabi ANDROID_DEPLOY_QT /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/bin/androiddeployqt ANDROID_JAVA_API_LEVEL android-19 ANDROID_NATIVE_API_LEVEL 19 BUILD_STANDALONE ON CMAKE_ASM_COMPILER /home/myname/Development/Android/android-ndk/toolchains/arm-linux-androideabi-4.8/prebuilt/linux-x86/b CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX /home/myname/Development/Android/android-ndk/toolchains/arm-linux-androideabi-4.8/prebuilt/linux-x86/u COMPRESSED_AUDIO ogg ECM_DIR ECM_DIR-NOTFOUND EXECUTABLE_OUTPUT_PATH /home/myname/Development/GComprisNew/GCompris-qt/bin KF5_DIR KF5_DIR-NOTFOUND LIBRARY_OUTPUT_PATH /home/myname/Development/GComprisNew/GCompris-qt/libs/armeabi LIBRARY_OUTPUT_PATH_ROOT /home/myname/Development/GComprisNew/GCompris-qt Qt5AndroidExtras_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5AndroidExtras Qt5Core_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5Core Qt5Gui_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5Gui Qt5LinguistTools_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5LinguistTools Qt5Multimedia_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5Multimedia Qt5Network_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5Network Qt5Qml_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5Qml Qt5Quick_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5Quick Qt5Svg_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5Svg Qt5Widgets_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5Widgets Qt5XmlPatterns_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5XmlPatterns Qt5Xml_DIR /home/myname/Qt5.5.0/5.5/android_armv7/lib/cmake/Qt5Xml QML_BOX2D_LIBRARY /home/myname/Development/GComprisNew/GCompris-qt/external/qml-box2d/
Creating the apk
To create the apk in your android build directory:
make BuildTranslations make apk_debug
Deploying on android device
To deploy, plug you computer to your tablet. Go into you tablet preferences, switch on the developer mode.
Into the console, type the following command:
adb install -r GCompris-debug.apk
Compiling GCompris for SailfishOS
You need to download and install the sailfishOS SDK (SDK). Once done, you need to start the mersdk virtual machine:
VBoxManage startvm MerSDK
And ssh into it:
ssh -p 2222 -i ~/SailfishOS/vmshare/ssh/private_keys/engine/mersdk mersdk@localhost
In order to build you need to install cmake and git:
sb2 -t SailfishOS-armv7hl -m sdk-install -R zypper install cmake git
Then, you need to log in armv7hl:
sb2 -t SailfishOS-armv7hl
Clone the source code and on a separate folder type:
cmake -DSAILFISHOS=1 -DBUILD_ARCH=armv7hl ../gcompris/ && make package
You will probably have the following error at the end: CPack Error: Problem copying the package: /home/mersdk/build_arm/_CPack_Packages/Linux/RPM/gcompris-0.34-Linux.rpm to /home/mersdk/build_arm/gcompris-0.34-Linux.rpm but it's ok. You can find the generated package at: /home/mersdk/build_ arm/_CPack_Packages/Linux/RPM/harbour-gcompris-qt-0.34-1.armv7hl.rpm.
If you want to build the translations, you need to install gettext (for msgattrib) and follow the chapter Qt_Quick_development_process#Getting_and_compiling_translations. /!\ Does a Subversion package exist? Maybe https://openrepos.net/content/nieldk/subversion-0?
You can also build for emulator (replace all armv7hl above with i486). To install on emulator, run the SailfishOS emulator and copy the rpm into it. You can copy it from the mersdk vm using the shared folders to get it from the mersdk and on your host:
scp -P 2223 -i ~/SailfishOS/vmshare/ssh/private_keys/SailfishOS_Emulator/nemo harbour-gcompris-qt-0.34_1-1.i486.rpm nemo@localhost:RPMS ssh -p 2223 -i ~/SailfishOS/vmshare/ssh/private_keys/SailfishOS_Emulator/nemo nemo@localhost pkcon install-local harbour-gcompris-qt-0.34-1_1.i486.rpm
It should now appear on the emulator.
Compiling GCompris for Ubuntu click
You need to have a ubuntu OS installed and the ubuntu sdk (sudo apt-get install ubuntu-sdk).
Clone the source code in a GCompris-qt folder.
Then, you need to create the chroot environment (it can take some time) and log into it:
sudo click chroot -a armhf -f ubuntu-sdk-14.10 create sudo click chroot -a armhf -f ubuntu-sdk-14.10 run
You can use a newer one instead of 14.10.
Inside the chroot, you need to manually install the QtQuickControls module and run the compilation command:
apt-get install qml-module-qtquick-controls:armhf cmake -DWITH_UBUNTU=on -DUBUNTU_CLICK=1 -DQt5_DIR=/usr/lib/arm-linux-gnueabihf/cmake/Qt5/ ../GCompris-qt/ && export QT_SELECT=qt5-arm-linux-gnueabihf && make && make DESTDIR=/tmp/click/ install
To compile and embed translations, you need to follow the chapter Qt_Quick_development_process#Getting_and_compiling_translations.
Then outside the chroot, you need to run the click command to create the package:
click build /tmp/click/
This will create the click package.
Compiling GCompris for Windows
Compilation on Windows has been tested with mingw only. Download and install Qt for Windows with mingw (http://www.qt.io/). You also need to install NSIS (NSIS homepage).
Then, in a in Qt/mingw console:
cmake -G"MinGW Makefiles" ..\gcompris && mingw32-make && mingw32-make package.
The package creation can take some time because of the dependencies retrieval.
Compiling GCompris for Mac OS X
Compilation on OSX is quite similar to Linux.
Install CMake. CMake is a cross-platform free software program for managing the build process of software using a compiler-independent method.
The minimum version to compile GCompris is 2.8.
Download and install Qt for OSX.
Then in console:
$ git clone https://github.com/gcompris/GCompris-qt.git
$ cd GCompris-qt
$ git submodule init && git submodule update
$ export Qt5_DIR=$HOME/Qt5.7.0/5.7/clang_64/lib/cmake/Qt5/
(This path would vary with your Qt5 folder location)
$ mkdir build
$ cd build
$ cmake ..
If you see errors with 'Box2D', make with this command:
$ cmake -DQML_BOX2D_MODULE=disabled ..
$ make
This should successfully build GCompris on your Mac.
To run, start the GCompris-qt.app file in build/bin/ folder.
Getting and compiling translations
By default, no translation are present in the git repository. We need to get them from the KDE svn KDE i10n svn. You can see the translation status at GCompris translation status.
You need to have subversion and msgattrib installed.
To get all the translation files, you need to create the Makefile using cmake (see above) and type:
make getSvnTranslations
This will copy all the po files to a po/ folder in the source directory.
Once you have done this, you need to run again cmake in order to have all the translations handled. Then, to build the translations used by GCompris, type:
make BuildTranslations
Then go into the bin directory and type ./gcompris-qt to launch the software (or running from QtCreator). In the configuration dialog box, you can choose your language. Restart the application to see the language change.
If you're compiling using Qt Creator, you can go to the Projects tab and in Build Steps, add a build step and check BuildTranslations.
Getting translations from the Gtk version
When adding a Gtk ported activity in the QtQuick version, if you used the strings for texts of the Gtk version, you can update all existing translation files. For this, first you need to update existing translation files using (this will add the new strings which will be untranslated for now):
make UpdateTranslations
Then, using the convertPo.py tool (and the updateAll.sh which applies it to all translations), you can update the files to get the translations from the Gtk version (if they existed).
Adding resources
- For resources, you have to put them in the resource directory of your activity
- A compiled qrc file named youractivity.rcc is auto generated by the compilation chain
- You must run cmake again to have new resources included in the qrc
- If you change a resource, a simple make will update the rcc file
- To reference your resource, use a qrc:/ url in the source. The path is:
qrc:/gcompris/src/activities/*youractivity*/resource/*myfile.svg*