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I am having a super hard time compiling and using TagLib 1.6.3 in my Qt project. I've tried everything I can think of. TagLib claims that it is supported through CMake but I'm not having any luck. Furthermore, I'm confused about what kinds of files I even need for my Qt libs!

I've built *.a files, *.lib, and *.dll. From what I understand thus far... I believe that since I'm working in Windows *.lib is what I want. No matter what I do, I always end up with "undefined references" to any TagLib functions I try to use when I try to compile my Qt project. I have tried MinGW32, MSYS, Visual Studio 2008, and even cross-compiling for Windows on Linux. All turning up nothing.

What makes even less sense to me is that if I compile the same TagLib source with Qt on Mac (g++ I think?) it works fine! Somewhere in my Windows compilation procedures I have to be going wrong. I have been smacking my face on my desk for probably about 30 (on and off) hours trying to figure this out.

Since Qt uses minGW must I compile TagLib with the same compiler?

If I compile *.lib's with Visual Studio are they not compatible?

Are *.a libraries even usable in Windows? (assuming minGW)

I'm still trying to get a handle on this C++ stuff, but after reading countless forum threads and other questions I'm still coming up short. Here is what I have been working with in CMake currently...

cmake -G "MinGW Makefiles" -DENABLE_STATIC=ON -DHAVE_ZLIB=0 -DWITH_MP4=1 -DMAKE_TAGLIB_LIB=1
cmake --build ./

This generates a single *.a file of ~2MB in size. The working library on Mac was ~3MB, and the *.lib from Visual Studio was ~4MB in Release mode. Please someone save me from this C++ cross platform command line madness because I am at my wit's end. I would probably even pay you to just compiling me some %!$#&ing libraries. Thanks.

3 Answers 3

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Since Mac works for you, I'm just talking about Win32.

Ok, this are my Taglib.pro and an excerpt of my project.pro: https://gist.github.com/449ea81ce92f52399f41. Check them out. My Taglib may be a bit outdated, so take care, some files you may have could be missing there. Also take care of the relative paths. They are all relative to the .pro file.

I just ran cmake . inside the taglib directory. This should result in a config.h and a taglib_config.h

You definitly only need the libTaglib.a when you use QtCreator and mingw-gcc. *.lib are MSVC specific!

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  • This is great information to have, thanks. In the past I have been smashing all the *.h files into one directory for my INCLUDEPATH to make it easier to manage. Is this incorrect? Also I haven't been including DEPENDPATH because I didn't know I needed it.
    – jocull
    Commented Oct 7, 2010 at 13:29
  • To be honest I'm not sure if you need DEPENDPATH, but it doesn't hurt either. Since TagLib itself relies on proper Include Paths smashing all .h files into one directory is not a good idea but not the source of your linker problem!
    – WolfgangP
    Commented Oct 7, 2010 at 13:48
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    Im not 100% sure about this: You're compiling TagLib as a shared library, but your linker complains about some symbols. Make sure your linker does know that the symbols from TagLib are dynamically loaded, not statically! Make sure you don't have defined TAGLIB_STATIC nor MAKE_TAGLIB_LIB when compiling your program. Read taglib_export.h carefully as this file is the pivotal point for exporting or importing symbols.
    – WolfgangP
    Commented Oct 7, 2010 at 13:52
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    When you create a .dll and a .a file you create a shared resource. To link TagLib statically (ie. directly) into your binary, just add TagLib's sources to your .pro file (with SOURCES) and define TAGLIB_STATIC.
    – WolfgangP
    Commented Oct 7, 2010 at 17:08
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    Glad to hear that. Try to copy TagLib.dll into the same directory as your QtTrayTime.exe.
    – WolfgangP
    Commented Oct 7, 2010 at 23:15
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This blog post details the whole process described in this thread.

The blog post author, Joel, was nice enough to provide the binaries of taglib 3.6.3 compiled for windows.

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I use cmake for my projects.Here is my cmake file for a media player I made that uses taglib. I installed taglib to /usr/local/ (this way I don't have to change anything when I compile in Linux). The important parts have an arrow.

project(qtmu3)
find_package(Qt4 REQUIRED)
-> find_library(TAGLIB_LIB tag PATH /usr/local/lib/)
set(QT_USE_PHONON TRUE)
set(QTMU_SRCS main.cpp mainwindow.cpp WidgetMarqueeLabel.cpp single_application.cpp)
set(QTMU_MOC_HDRS mainwindow.h WidgetMarqueeLabel.h single_application.h)
set(QTMU_UI_FILES mainwindow.ui)
set(QTMU_RSRC_FILES myresources.qrc)
-> include_directories(/usr/local/include/taglib/)
set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS "-mwindows")
include(${QT_USE_FILE})
QT4_WRAP_UI( QTMU_UI_HDRS ${QTMU_UI_FILES})
QT4_WRAP_CPP( QTMU_MOC_SRCS ${QTMU_MOC_HDRS})
QT4_ADD_RESOURCES(QTMU_RSRC_SRCS ${QTMU_RSRC_FILES})
INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES( ${CMAKE_BINARY_DIR} )
ADD_EXECUTABLE(qtmu3 ${QTMU_SRCS} ${QTMU_MOC_SRCS} ${QTMU_RSRC_SRCS} ${QTMU_UI_HDRS})
-> TARGET_LINK_LIBRARIES(qtmu3 ${QT_LIBRARIES} ${TAGLIB_LIB}) 

The last one, just the ${TAGLIB_LIB} is important. hope that helps someone.

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