Delete unused c++ files from the project
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@rockon209 said in Delete unused c++ files from the project:
the unused c++ file
Please elaborate what you mean with "the unused c++ file".
Regards
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if you just mean the intermediate MOC files then make clean does that
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@Kent-Dorfman
@Qt-Champions-2018
No not MOC files, normal C++ files(.cpp and .h) that are not used now in the project at all. In my project i have lot of these files which are in import but not used at all.
There are also some cases that one files is used in another file but this another file is not used anywehere. So doing this manually will take a lot of time. So a script can be used. That why i need a script to do this. -
The .pro file should contain a list of all the needed project files. parse it and delete whatever is not referenced therein...
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@Kent-Dorfman
I am not using qmake in my project i have cmake files. Thats why i dont have .pro file -
@rockon209 said in Delete unused c++ files from the project:
Don't do that. People don't appreciate being summoned. If they have something to say, they're going to post their thoughts on their own.
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@rockon209 You can parse cmake files as well.
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@rockon209 So how do you know a file is "unused"? If you don't have a way to know that, that will be a very hard task to write such a script.
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@rockon209 Shouldn't you as developer know which files are used and which not?
And why do you actually have unused files in your project?What you can do: build your project and analyse the build log to see which files were compiled, remove all files which were not compiled.
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Well I am not the only developer, there are many other developer doing the develpment for there specific part assign to them.
ya but in build i am not sure if all the files are build. I mean let say in a Phone we have lot of application which are used and those application are not build everytime. I am not sure just guessing -
@rockon209 Well, then you will need to collect build logs for all supported platforms and analyse all of them.
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@rockon209
if you're using QtCreator,you can right click on a class definition, and select
open include-hierachy
, should help you.But I don't think that it will show stuff that is OS-Dependend - if the includes are wrapped inside #if defined(Q_OS_WIN) #endif blocks
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Hi,
Then in your script you'll have to parse all your sources, build a list of the include statements contained in all headers and implementation files, build a list of all the header/implementation files and then compare both and delete the files that do not appear in the list of include statements.