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Mastering Qt 5

You're reading from   Mastering Qt 5 Create stunning cross-platform applications

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2016
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781786467126
Length 526 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Authors (2):
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Robin Penea Robin Penea
Author Profile Icon Robin Penea
Robin Penea
Guillaume Lazar Guillaume Lazar
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Guillaume Lazar
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Toc

Table of Contents (15) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Get Your Qt Feet Wet FREE CHAPTER 2. Discovering QMake Secrets 3. Dividing Your Project and Ruling Your Code 4. Conquering the Desktop UI 5. Dominating the Mobile UI 6. Even Qt Deserves a Slice of Raspberry Pi 7. Third-Party Libraries Without a Headache 8. Animations - Its Alive, Alive! 9. Keeping Your Sanity with Multithreading 10. Need IPC? Get Your Minions to Work 11. Having Fun with Serialization 12. You Shall (Not) Pass with QTest 13. All Packed and Ready to Deploy 14. Qt Hat Tips and Tricks

Generating a command-line interface

The command-line interface can be a wonderful way to start your application with some specific options. The Qt framework provides an easy way to define your options with the QCommandLineParser class. You can provide a short (for example, -t) or a long (for example, --test) option name. The application version and help menu is automatically generated. You can easily retrieve in your code if an option is set or not. An option can take a value and you can define a default value.

For example, we can create a CLI to configure the log files. We want to define three options:

  • The -debug command, if set, enables the log file writing
  • The -f or --file command to define where to write the logs
  • The -l or --level <level> command to specify the minimum log level

Look at the following snippet:

QCoreApplication app(argc, argv); 
 
QCoreApplication::setApplicationName("ch14-hat-tips"); 
QCoreApplication::setApplicationVersion...
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