I've found conflicting answers on the web - some say it does, some say it doesn't. I was unable to find any details in the official Qt documentation either. So does Qt have C bindings or not?
|
Short answer: no. If you need a comprehensive GUI toolkit for C, you can use GTK+. To use Qt, you must have a C++ compiler. But it doesn't mean that your "application logic" can't be written in C, compiled with a C compiler and carefully linked to the C++ part (the GUI with Qt). This application logic can be generic, linkable into other executables (pure-C, mixed C/C++, etc.) It all depends on what you need. Qt is great for C++, though, and it's a good reason to decide using C++ for a particular project, even if you still want to keep parts in C. |
||||
|
|
|
No. Qt is C++. But you could just write C-style code everywhere that doesn't interact/create GUI elements and compile the whole thing with your C++ compiler of choice. |
|||
|
|
|
Unfortunately not, but you may shape your program as set of libraries achiving your business logic and write them in C, then you can use a little C++ to bind what you wrote as library with a GUI using QT. This is a good approach also because later you can reuse your library and implement many other front-ends with different toolkits or languages! |
|||
|
|
|
There used to be a Binding called QtC, but searching for it reveals this thread: From Richard Dale:
Smoke is here. I have been unable find a clear reference the QtC Bindings anywhere, though I remember hearing about them. |
|||
|
|
|
I don't think it does. Qt is always described as a "class library" and it requires C++ compilers to build. You could try to write/find a DLL/interface that will be wrap around QT and provide an API to a C layer. |
|||
|
|
|
You could always use a C++ compiler that simply translates C++ to C, then call the mangled names it generates, etc. :-) |
|||||
|