How much cost Qt for Indie developers ?
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You don't miss anything - there aren't any prices.
You will have to contact Digia, either using their contact form, or
bq.
Customers in the Americas:
Digia USA Inc., Attn: Qt Commercial, 2350 Mission College Blvd., Suite #1020, Santa Clara, California 95054, U.S.A., Fax: + 1 408 433 9360, Phone: +1 408 433 9320
Customers elsewhere Worldwide:
Digia Plc, Attn: Qt Commercial, Nydalsveien 33, Postboks 4814 Nydalen, 0484 Oslo, Norway, Fax: +47 22 23 70 40, Phone: +47 2295 1303There is even an official, "Tuukka Turunen":http://developer.qt.nokia.com/member/13189, present here at the QDN.
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When the licences were still sold by Nokia, I believe that they cost something like EUR 1400 per developer for a single platform licence. You could also buy a 2 or 3 platform licence at a few hundred per additional platform. No idea if Digia is using a very different price model, but I doubt it.
If you need more exact data, you have to ask Digia, of course.
Note that you may also considder using the LGPL version of the toolkit. That would be a much cheaper option for an "indie", I think. The limitations are not such that it is impossible to develop commercial software that way.
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Just a note: I think that this post maybe moved somewhere else, i.e. The lounge subforum...
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Ooops... I was sure it was under Mobile and Embedded. Sure, it is a tipycal Independent Developer's argument :)
Sorry
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[quote author="williamsj" date="1321378286"]Prices I got from Digia are the same as Nokia was quoting:
Qt Desktop Single OS – 2.995,-
Qt Desktop Multi OS – 4.195,-
Qt Embedded Single - 4.795,-
Qt Embedded Multi – 5.595,-
Qt All OS – 6.395,-All prices are in Euro and per developer.[/quote]
Sorry for dumb question, but i cant find complete answer for this.
What can I get for this price?
And what difference between opensource version and version from Digia? -
If it's too expensive for your - nobody forces you to buy a license. Go with the LGPL version and be happy. There's nothing to flame about this. If you run a business making money out of the software you build on top of Qt, it's likely that the license fees are negligible compared to the other costs. And there's more you get for the money than only the license, e.g. dedicated support, bug fixes, etc.
Let's be happy that there are that much options and everyone can choose what fits ones needs.
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[quote author="Ryein" date="1345071590"]I'm happy about that, but I just don't know why it's so hard to figure out the prices. I got a credit card ready, but haven't heard back for about a week on the prices.[/quote]
I feel bad for the credit card, they're really big prices. In their site they tell you the benefits of a commercial license.
(I'd love to be able to statically build without having to purchase... But well) -
I’d love to be able to statically build without having to purchase…
Unfortunatelly in static linked Qt 5.0 not worked QML 2.0 feature, also you can't link static with ICU and Angle (used in Qt 5.0).
This way commercial license have no benefits except paid support. -
Qt would not stand where it stays today, if they would not have so many developers. And most contributions are not made from hobbyists, they are made by commercial programmers. If I
sell successfully a commercial application, I would be happy to buy a licence, because I make sure that my foundation will not break away. And that is quite a crucial benefit.... Just my two cents.Bests
Mike