| 1 | /**************************************************************************** | 
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| 2 | ** | 
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| 3 | ** Copyright (C) 2009 Nokia Corporation and/or its subsidiary(-ies). | 
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| 4 | ** Contact: Qt Software Information (qt-info@nokia.com) | 
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| 15 | ** GNU Lesser General Public License Usage | 
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| 40 | ****************************************************************************/ | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | /*! | 
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| 43 | \page developing-on-mac.html | 
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| 44 | \title Developing Qt Applications on Mac OS X | 
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| 45 | \brief A overview of items to be aware of when developing Qt applications | 
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| 46 | on Mac OS X | 
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| 47 | \ingroup platform-notes | 
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| 48 |  | 
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| 49 | \tableofcontents | 
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| 50 |  | 
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| 51 | Mac OS X is a UNIX platform and behaves similar to other Unix-like | 
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| 52 | platforms. The main difference is X11 is not used as the primary windowing | 
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| 53 | system. Instead, Mac OS X uses its own native windowing system that is | 
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| 54 | accessible through the Carbon and Cocoa APIs.  Application development on | 
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| 55 | Mac OS X is done using Xcode Tools, an optional install included on every | 
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| 56 | Mac with updates available from \l {http://developer.apple.com}{Apple's | 
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| 57 | developer website}. Xcode Tools includes Apple-modified versions of the GCC | 
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| 58 | compiler. | 
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| 59 |  | 
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| 60 |  | 
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| 61 | \section1 What Versions of Mac OS X are Supported? | 
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| 62 |  | 
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| 63 | As of Qt 4.5, Qt supports Mac OS X versions 10.3 (for \bold{deployment | 
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| 64 | only}, not for development), 10.4 and 10.5. It is usually in the best | 
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| 65 | interest of the developer and user to be running the latest updates to any | 
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| 66 | version. We test internally against Mac OS X 10.3.9 and Mac OS X 10.4.11 as | 
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| 67 | well as the updated release of Mac OS X 10.5. | 
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| 68 |  | 
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| 69 |  | 
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| 70 | \section2 Carbon or Cocoa? | 
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| 71 |  | 
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| 72 | Historically, Qt has used the Carbon toolkit, which supports 32-bit | 
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| 73 | applications on Mac OS X 10.3 and up. Qt 4.5 adds support for the Cocoa | 
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| 74 | toolkit, which requires 10.5 and provides 64-bit support. | 
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| 75 |  | 
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| 76 | This detail is typically not important to Qt application developers.  Qt is | 
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| 77 | cross-platform across Carbon and Cocoa, and Qt applications behave | 
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| 78 | the same way when configured for either one. Eventually, the Carbon | 
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| 79 | version will be discontinued. This is something to keep in mind when you | 
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| 80 | consider writing code directly against native APIs. | 
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| 81 |  | 
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| 82 | The current binary for Qt is built for Carbon. If you want to choose which | 
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| 83 | framework Qt will use, you must build from scratch. Carbon or Cocoa is | 
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| 84 | chosen when configuring the package for building. The configure process | 
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| 85 | selects Carbon by default, to specify Cocoa use the \c{-cocoa} flag. | 
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| 86 | configure for a 64-bit architecture using one of the \c{-arch} flags (see | 
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| 87 | \l{universal binaries}{Universal Binaries}). | 
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| 88 |  | 
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| 89 | Currently, Apple's GCC 4.0.1 is used by default. When building on 10.5, | 
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| 90 | Apple's GCC 4.2 is also available and selectable with the configure flag: | 
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| 91 | \c{-platform macx-g++42}. GCC 3.x will \e not work. Experimental LLVM-GCC | 
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| 92 | support is available by passing in the \c{-platform macx-llvm} flag. | 
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| 93 |  | 
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| 94 | The following table summarizes the different versions of Mac OS X and what | 
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| 95 | capabilities are used by Qt. | 
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| 96 |  | 
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| 97 | \table | 
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| 98 | \header | 
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| 99 | \o Mac OS X Version | 
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| 100 | \o Cat Name | 
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| 101 | \o Native API Used by Qt | 
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| 102 | \o Bits available to address memory | 
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| 103 | \o CPU Architecture Supported | 
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| 104 | \o Development Platform | 
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| 105 | \row | 
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| 106 | \o 10.3 | 
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| 107 | \o Panther | 
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| 108 | \o Carbon | 
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| 109 | \o 32 | 
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| 110 | \o PPC | 
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| 111 | \o No | 
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| 112 | \row | 
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| 113 | \o 10.4 | 
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| 114 | \o Tiger | 
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| 115 | \o Carbon | 
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| 116 | \o 32 | 
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| 117 | \o PPC/Intel | 
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| 118 | \o Yes | 
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| 119 | \row | 
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| 120 | \o 10.5 | 
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| 121 | \o Leopard | 
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| 122 | \o Carbon | 
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| 123 | \o 32 | 
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| 124 | \o PPC/Intel | 
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| 125 | \o Yes | 
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| 126 | \row | 
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| 127 | \o 10.5 | 
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| 128 | \o Leopard | 
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| 129 | \o Cocoa | 
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| 130 | \o 32/64 | 
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| 131 | \o PPC/Intel | 
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| 132 | \o Yes | 
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| 133 | \endtable | 
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| 134 |  | 
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| 135 | \section2 Which One Should I Use? | 
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| 136 |  | 
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| 137 | Carbon and Cocoa both have their advantages and disadvantages. Probably the | 
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| 138 | easiest way to determine is to look at the version of Mac OS X you are | 
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| 139 | targetting.  If you are starting a new application and can target 10.5 and | 
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| 140 | up, then please consider Cocoa only. If you have an existing application or | 
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| 141 | need to target earlier versions of the operating system and do not need | 
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| 142 | access to 64-bit or newer Apple technologies, then Carbon is a good fit. If | 
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| 143 | your needs fall in between, you can go with a 64-bit Cocoa and 32-bit | 
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| 144 | Carbon universal application with the appropriate checks in your code to | 
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| 145 | choose the right path based on where you are running the application. | 
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| 146 |  | 
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| 147 | \target universal binaries | 
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| 148 | \section1 Universal Binaries | 
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| 149 |  | 
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| 150 | In 2006, Apple begin transitioning from PowerPC (PPC) to Intel (x86) | 
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| 151 | systems.  Both architectures are supported by Qt. The release of Mac OS X | 
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| 152 | 10.5 in October 2007 added the possibility of writing and deploying 64-bit | 
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| 153 | GUI applications. Qt 4.5 supports both the 32-bit (PPC and x86) and 64-bit | 
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| 154 | (PPC64 and x86-64) versions of PowerPC and Intel-based systems are | 
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| 155 | supported. | 
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| 156 |  | 
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| 157 | Universal binaries are used to bundle binaries for more than one | 
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| 158 | architecture into a single package, simplifying deployment and | 
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| 159 | distribution. When running an application the operating system will select | 
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| 160 | the most appropriate architecture. Universal binaries support the following | 
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| 161 | architectures; they can be added to the build at configure time using the | 
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| 162 | \c{-arch} arguments: | 
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| 163 |  | 
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| 164 | \table | 
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| 165 | \header | 
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| 166 | \o Architecture | 
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| 167 | \o Flag | 
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| 168 | \row | 
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| 169 | \o Intel, 32-bit | 
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| 170 | \o \c{-arch x86} | 
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| 171 | \row | 
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| 172 | \o Intel, 64-bit | 
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| 173 | \o \c{-arch x86_64} | 
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| 174 | \row | 
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| 175 | \o PPC, 32-bit | 
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| 176 | \o \c{-arch ppc} | 
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| 177 | \row | 
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| 178 | \o PPC, 64-bit | 
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| 179 | \o \c{-arch ppc64} | 
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| 180 | \endtable | 
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| 181 |  | 
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| 182 | If there are no \c{-arch} flags specified, configure builds for the 32-bit | 
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| 183 | architecture, if you are currently on one. Universal binaries were initially | 
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| 184 | used to simplify the PPC to Intel migration. You can use \c{-universal} to | 
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| 185 | build for both the 32-bit Intel and PPC architectures. | 
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| 186 |  | 
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| 187 | \note The \c{-arch} flags at configure time only affect how Qt is built. | 
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| 188 | Applications are by default built for the 32-bit architecture you are | 
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| 189 | currently on. To build a universal binary, add the architectures to the | 
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| 190 | CONFIG variable in the .pro file: | 
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| 191 |  | 
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| 192 | \code | 
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| 193 | CONFIG += x86 ppc x86_64 ppc64 | 
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| 194 | \endcode | 
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| 195 |  | 
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| 196 |  | 
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| 197 | \section1 Day-to-Day Application Development on OS X | 
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| 198 |  | 
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| 199 | On the command-line, applications can be built using \c qmake and \c make. | 
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| 200 | Optionally, \c qmake can generate project files for Xcode with | 
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| 201 | \c{-spec macx-xcode}. If you are using the binary package, \c qmake | 
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| 202 | generates Xcode projects by default; use \c{-spec macx-gcc} to generate | 
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| 203 | makefiles. | 
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| 204 |  | 
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| 205 | The result of the build process is an application bundle, which is a | 
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| 206 | directory structure that contains the actual application executable. The | 
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| 207 | application can be launched by double-clicking it in Finder, or by | 
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| 208 | referring directly to its executable from the command line, i. e. | 
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| 209 | \c{myApp.app/Contents/MacOS/myApp}. | 
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| 210 |  | 
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| 211 | If you wish to have a command-line tool that does not use the GUI (e.g., | 
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| 212 | \c moc, \c uic or \c ls), you can tell \c qmake not to execute the bundle | 
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| 213 | creating steps by removing it from the \c{CONFIG} in your \c{.pro} file: | 
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| 214 |  | 
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| 215 | \code | 
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| 216 | CONFIG -= app_bundle | 
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| 217 | \endcode | 
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| 218 |  | 
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| 219 |  | 
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| 220 | \section1 Deployment - "Compile once, deploy everywhere" | 
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| 221 |  | 
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| 222 | In general, Qt supports building on one Mac OS X version and deploying on | 
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| 223 | all others, both forward and backwards. You can build on 10.4 Tiger and run | 
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| 224 | the same binary on 10.3 and 10.5. | 
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| 225 |  | 
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| 226 | Some restrictions apply: | 
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| 227 |  | 
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| 228 | \list | 
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| 229 | \o  Some functions and optimization paths that exist in later versions | 
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| 230 | of Mac OS X will not be available if you build on an earlier | 
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| 231 | version of Mac OS X. | 
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| 232 | \o  The CPU architecture should match. | 
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| 233 | \o  Cocoa support is only available for Mac OS X 10.5 and up. | 
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| 234 | \endlist | 
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| 235 |  | 
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| 236 | Universal binaries can be used to provide a smorgasbord of configurations | 
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| 237 | catering to all possible architectures. | 
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| 238 |  | 
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| 239 | Mac applications are typically deployed as self-contained application | 
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| 240 | bundles. The application bundle contains the application executable as well | 
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| 241 | as dependencies such as the Qt libraries, plugins, translations and other | 
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| 242 | resources you may need. Third party libraries like Qt are normally not | 
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| 243 | installed system-wide; each application provides its own copy. | 
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| 244 |  | 
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| 245 | The most common way to distribute applications is to provide a compressed | 
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| 246 | disk image (.dmg file) that the user can mount in Finder. The Mac | 
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| 247 | deployment tool (macdeployqt) can be used to create the self-contained bundles, and | 
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| 248 | optionally also create a .dmg archive. See the | 
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| 249 | \l{Deploying an Application on Mac OS X}{Mac deployment guide} for more | 
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| 250 | information about deployment. It is also possible to use an installer | 
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| 251 | wizard. More information on this option can be found in | 
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| 252 | \l{http://developer.apple.com/mac/}{Apple's documentation}. | 
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| 253 | */ | 
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| 254 |  | 
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