(resolved) adding versions of the libraries (was: Creator: size_t/ssize_t not recognized)
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I usually set it up manually myself, but IIRC, for auto-detection to work, the folders containing your compiler and qmake.exe (C:<qt-install-dir>\bin ) must be in your PATH environment variable.
You can also add them manually via Tools -> Options -> Build & Run -> Qt Versions/Tool Chains -> Add
Once Qt Creator knows where to find Qt and your compiler, you can set up different "build configurations" (i.e. choose your Qt version & compiler) on a per-project basis by...
- ... starting a new project (Creator will show you a "Configure Project" window), or
- ... clicking "Projects" on the left of Creator, while your project is open
Then, if you've set up multiple build configurations, you can switch between them by clicking on the computer icon on the bottom-left of Creator.
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Hmm...I'm going to pursue the auto-detect route, just to prove that I can make it work. I added the two paths containing the 4.8.3 qmake.exe, but nothing new shows up in my "Qt Versions" window. Do I need to install more than just the libraries?
FWIW: I put the additions to PATH in my project settings, not into my system-wide properties. I even exited and relaunched Creator...no luck. What step am I leaving out?
Thanks...
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By "project settings", do you mean .pro file? I'm not sure if that works. The .pro file is for qmake to use... i.e. qmake must already be found before you can give it your .pro file. Furthermore, qmake is compiler-agnostic: It simply creates a Makefile, which Qt Creator then passes to your tool chain.
Your options, that I can think of, are:
- Add the PATH to your system-wide (or at least user-level) settings, or
- Launch Qt Creator through a Batch file that sets a temporary environment before launching Creator
Some things to look out for: If I'm not mistaken, Windows 7 and older do not recognize new system-wide PATH variables until you reboot (maybe logout+relogin). If I'm not mistaken again, Windows 8 behaves more sensibly, and PATH additions are immediately usable.
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Nope, we run the Qt version auto detection only once and that will pick up whatever is in your PATH at that time. You do not want your Qt versions to change (which will most likely effect all your project configurations!) depending on how you started creator (usually cmd-windows end up having different PATHes set than those used by windows when clicking on the application icon).
You will need to register the Qt versions manually. The only way for us to reliably detect all Qt versions installed at any time is to search all your harddrives at startup of creator. That takes way too long to be practical.
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Somehow I missed notification of your replies. So, I tried manually adding 4.8.3 (MinGW) and Creator gives me a message:
"Qt version is not properly installed, please run make install"
So...what did I do wrong, and where am I supposed to run "make install?"
Thanks.
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Other people got the same error message at http://www.qtcentre.org/threads/35130-Error-quot-QT-version-is-not-properly-installed-please-run-make-install-quot-on-Windows-XP and http://qt-project.org/forums/viewthread/7026 -- not sure if they're the same problem as your, but let's try.
Some diagnosis questions:
How did you install Qt 4.8.3?
How did you install Qt Creator?
After you told Qt Creator where to find Qt 4.8.3, did you re-configure your project (or start a new project) to use Qt 4.8.3?
One other thing: The pre-built libraries for MinGW are incompatible with the latest MinGW with GCC 4.7; you'll need GCC 4.4. I'm using the MinGW that came with the latest Qt SDK. (However, I don't think this is the cause of your error message. Using an incompatible GCC would still compile successfully, but crash at runtime)
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- I pulled the libraries off of http://qt-project.org/downloads and just ran the installers
- I don't recall
- No...I figured I should get the installation right before trying to use it.
Thanks...
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I haven't seen that error before, so I'm not sure what's going on, sorry
Since you just ran an official installer, Qt itself should be fine.
It might be worth putting your Qt4.8.3\bin folder in your PATH, uninstall Creator, reboot, and reinstall Qt Creator (you can get version 2.5.2 from the download page) -- and have it auto-detect your Qt installation
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Hmm...still not working. It found the 4.8.3 directory from PATH, but didn't accept the version of qmake (same error as before). Currently I'm stuck with 4.8.1 for MSVC2010; this is going to pose a real problem very soon.
I even uninstalled and downloaded a new copy of the SDK for this effort...not sure where to go from here. I hesitate to file a bug report, since I'm pretty sure I'm doing something wrong, but...options are getting low at this point.
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I'm at a loss, sorry -- no idea what could be the problem, or what to look for. The steps you've taken seem correct to me.
In the Build & Run menu, hover your mouse over the Qt version; it should display a long list of installatio macros/variables, pointing to parts of your installation folder (see screenshot). Does yours look similar?
!http://i.imgur.com/SS9jy.png(Qt installation)!
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AFAIK, Creator is (should be) capable of handling all supported compilers at once; there's no compiler-specific version of Creator, unlike the Qt libraries.
Your error message originated from this source file: http://qt.gitorious.org/qt-creator/qt-creator/blobs/master/src/plugins/qtsupport/baseqtversion.cpp You could try reverse-engineering it to see what Creator thinks is missing
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OK...I think I have it working now.
For posteriority, here's what I did:
- I deleted everything from my Qt install (using the maintenance tool and then deleting the other directories with the libs, etc.), and reinstalled from scratch:
QtSDK 1.2.1
Qt Libs 4.8.3 (MinGW 4.4)
Qt Creator 2.5.2
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Manually added the MinGW tool chain (even though there was already an entry), selected the g++.exe binary and the pythongdb debugger.
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Manually added 4.8.3 to my Qt Versions.
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Selected 4.8.3 in my build settings.
And now I seem to be back in battery.
Thanks for all the help, JKSH...I appreciate it.
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OK, I may have a new issue here. As noted above, I got this working with MinGW, which I'd installed into C:\Qt\4.8.3 per the installers recommendation. Today I was going to try to install the libraries for MSVC, and the installer wants to install into the same location as above. If I do this, I'm going to overwrite files and cause general confusion, right?
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Yep, installing into the same folder would do bad things :)
You can choose ANY new folder you want -- it won't affect Qt's ability to function. Even C:\PacMan\ will do, but I'd suggest something along the lines of C:\Qt\4.8.3_msvc\
P.S. And for consistency, the other installation could go into C:\Qt\4.8.3_mingw\ , but it's not necessary to disturb your private installation, if you can remember which is which
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You're welcome. :) Whether you remove and reinstall or not is completely up to you -- Qt doesn't care. I would do it, because (1) I like a tidy and consistent computing environment, and (2) Qt Creator displays the name of your installation root in your "Qt Versions" list
Actually, point (2) made me realize something: It probably looks nicer to install into C:\Qt\4.8.3\mingw\ and C:\Qt\4.8.3\msvc2010\ instead of C:\Qt\4.8.3_mingw\ and C:\Qt\4.8.3_msvc\ ... because Qt Creator will then say
"Qt 4.8.3 (mingw)" and "Qt 4.8.3 (msvc2010)"
instead of
"Qt 4.8.3 (4.8.3_mingw)" and "Qt 4.8.3 (4.8.3_msvc)"