10

Is Qt an interesting platform for business apps development, outside of Nokia phones ?
Why ? Strong points ?
Thanks

5
  • To be clear: I am NOT raising a controversy. I just inquire, and I hope the answers will be useful for other people.
    – iDevlop
    Mar 4, 2010 at 0:12
  • It's spelled Qt and pronounced like "cute" Mar 4, 2010 at 0:16
  • thanks all. Very difficult to choose a winning answer on this.
    – iDevlop
    Mar 8, 2010 at 16:54
  • 3
    Qt was only recently ported to Symbian and Maemo. Linux was supported from the beginning, Windows is another long-supported platform, and let's not forget Mac. 4.4 (I think) got support for Windows CE and Mobile. 4.6 got support for Symbian and 4.7 will come with Maemo as well. Many business applications have been created on top of Qt, simply because it's the best way to create general-purpose applications in C++, no doubts about it.
    – CMircea
    Mar 15, 2010 at 4:45
  • By the light of Nokia's recent choices, this question was really relevant :)
    – iDevlop
    Mar 2, 2011 at 8:03

7 Answers 7

21

I like Qt because:

  • Very well-designed framework, e.g. signal-slot, model-view, graphics view/scene/item/proxy, painter/paint device/paint engine..., too many to be listed here!
  • Excellent documentation!
  • Cross platform language/API, as well as tools like UI designer, creator, and so on.
  • Rich features, e.g. graphics framework, network library, database engine, and so on.
  • Active community, and active development.

There should be more. If you have ever used it, you'll find it's easy to build your framework upon Qt.

I didn't have any complain to Qt. If I have to say at least one disadvantage here, "convention". You must adopt the convention of Qt, e.g. You have to use moc to make the meta object of your objects, and it's easier for developers to use Qt's vector, list, auto_ptr than STL, tr1. But I never found any issue caused by that. On the contrary, it works very well.

In my opinion, Qt is the state-of-the-art C++ framework in this modern world!

P.S. There are a lot of commercial applications built on Qt. You can find it under Qt's official website. But I'd like add one more here: Perforce, one of the top commercial source code management tools, built its client tool on Qt for Windows/Linux/Mac.

20

yes it is .. just look at kde apps :)

further reading

may be this is not so related to the question ... but my first deal with qt was just great starting from their well organized Documentation to their great widgets

the GraphicsView is just ammazing ! :)

1
  • It's a cheap easy(enough) way to gui up your desktop apps for (almost)any OS.
    – cazlab
    Mar 3, 2010 at 23:53
13

It's about the only current/modern C++ gui library on Windows.

MFC is so old you have to write comments in Latin
WTL would be nice if they had finished it before abandoning it.
Winforms/WPF + managed C++/CLR - all the fun of several incompatible new technologies at once.

Bad points:
To fit on lots of platforms they have invented their own solutions to things that are now in the STL/Boost
The signal/slot mechanism - tricky to debug and silently fails (with no error) with simple typos.
Although everything is possible it's sometimes a lot of effort to do simple things (they do love MVC) compared to Winforms.

7
  • There is also wxWidgets, which is also quite good and has a BSD style license. But since Qt is LGPLed I would prefer it too. Mar 4, 2010 at 0:13
  • "I'd rather use a bag of dead rats for a GUI library than MFC." a quote that i have read before
    – Ahmed Kotb
    Mar 4, 2010 at 0:23
  • 1
    @Axel - I mentioned wx but it just confused the question and I didn't want to say bad things about it. Note wx and Qt are both LGPL, but wx has an exemption to allow static linking. In practice this means you can use it anywhere but it isn't BSD - specifically any changes you make you have to give back. Mar 4, 2010 at 0:28
  • 1
    They have invented them for a purpose. Qt has kept binary compatibility across minor versions for a long time; none of STL or Boost guarantee it and it can't be that easily with templates. Signals and slots are a lot more powerful than Boost signals, not just for C++, but for other language bindings as well. QMetaObject is invaluable, as is QObject. Their created their own containers to implement binary compatibility and thread-safe implicit sharing. This is all a good point, not a bad one.
    – CMircea
    Mar 15, 2010 at 4:39
  • 1
    @iconiK - yes but from a C++ programmers PoV it's a disadvantage that they use their own stuff. It's like claiming to C++ programmers that Java/C# is better because it has more powerful new features like GC. They invented many of them because they had to - copy on write strings is a great idea on a phone. Mar 15, 2010 at 4:47
13
  • Qt is simple
  • Qt is powerful
  • Qt is NATIVELY-CROSS-PLATFORM
  • Qt is REALLY-CROSS-PLATFORM
  • Qt is comprehensive (but the Media side of it still needs to grow)
  • Qt doesn't require Garbage Collection, but it embeds a GREAT model of memory management that makes you forget about memory deallocation
  • Qt is solid
  • Qt is modern
  • Qt proposes some new paradigm of programming that are really good (Signals-Slots)
  • Qt runs a lot of VERY successful software: (Skype, Google Earth...)

Are those points strong enough?

2
  • 1
    Standard C++ also has a memory model which makes you forget about memory deallocation :) Running away fast...
    – EFraim
    Apr 19, 2010 at 13:21
  • Yes, also VLC media player!
    – Nianliang
    Sep 30, 2013 at 18:00
9

Maybe you have heard about Google Earth which happens to be programmed in Qt too.

That aside, I like Qt for my in-house development because it

  • is very well supported and documented,
  • allows me to write simple and decent-looking apps that are
  • works cross-platform for Windows and Linux with little effort, and
  • contains nice to have components for database access, regexps, guis, xml, ...

I also use the Qwt widgets for easy real-time plotting on top of Qt.

7
  • I have heard this before, is this true of just the linux version or the windows and OS x versions too? Mar 4, 2010 at 0:49
  • I checked with ldd on my Linux version. I have no other version of Google Earth. But what reasons do we have to believe that they'd keep three source bases? Mar 4, 2010 at 1:12
  • 2
    Google Earth is not a good example for QT because the only real action happens in an OpenGL (or DirectX - whatever) widget. Same as with Opera which also uses QT but is also not a good example as it only uses a basic window and draws all content itself. I wonder why there is none real text processor or IDE written in QT, this would be GUI intensive.
    – Lothar
    Mar 4, 2010 at 2:40
  • I disagree. A large, complex, fairly interactive program with rather high visibility in terms of users is solid evidence that Qt "is not just for phones" as OP claimed. Qt happens to have good OpenGL support too. Mar 4, 2010 at 2:53
  • Ah, yes, Skype. Good one. And the CMake gui. Mar 4, 2010 at 21:15
6

I really dont understand whats the point in underestimating tools/frameworks which makes things easy for programmers. Qt is too good for GUI development, I would say its much better than any current existing crossplatform app development suite.

So many advantages, I have been using it for more than three years now for a product to be deployed in Linux/Win environments. The app is thread intensive and initially we had a tough time using pthreads and its conterpart for windows. Then we switched to Qt(and QThreads eventually) and things were a breeze... Backed by active development, a highly helpful and supportive community along with excellent documentation, training, certification programs, videos, forums... its easy, fast and effective to develop in Qt. You should see the video which they create a web browser in just five mins! Its really 'cross platform', and it doesnt have a software wrapper(like Java does) to enable this which makes it faster. Cmon, we all know java apps have buttons which takes a second to respond to even a simple 'click'.

I hope Qt will someday do a take on Java. :D

after all, 350000 developers cant be wrong when they chose Qt.

2
  • QT has a Java library called Qambi, I think. I was considering it for a project I'm working on (I'm primarily a Java guy). The project I'm working on has to interface with too many C++ components, so it wasn't worth it.
    – Chris K
    Mar 5, 2010 at 16:25
  • @Chris, it's QJambi, it's been discontinued.
    – CMircea
    Mar 15, 2010 at 4:42
4

Pixar uses Qt (or at least, used, as of 2005) internally for certain parts of their tool suite (called "Marionette" in the marketing) collectively called Menv, ("men-vee" for Modelling ENVironment)---at least for their lighting sub-tool Lumos.

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.