2

So I decided to use KDE Kirigami UI framework in my app so I followed the instructions here. I cloned the repo in my app directory and then added it with a simple include(kirigami/kirigami.pri) in my project file.

Now this works, however the problem I encountered is that in QML there is always the error: QML module not found when I import the plugin (import org.kde.kirigami 2.9). The project still compiles and runs just fine and I am able to use the UI components I need, however the major issue is that code completion and syntax highlighting for the Kirigami plugin do not work.

A similar question has been asked before here, I have tried all the suggestions in the answers of that thread but none of them worked:

  • I imported QQmlEngine::addImportPath the kirigami/src/controls folders using absolute and relative paths. I also tried with qrc:/.

  • I added a QML_IMPORT_PATH += $$PWD/kirigami/src/controls $$PWD/kirigami line to my project file.

1 Answer 1

1

When you mouse over the "module org.kde.kirigami not found" error marker in a QML file, the popup tells you that Qt Creator is looking in QML_IMPORT_PATH for these files. It also tells you how to set this.

By adding QML_IMPORT_PATH += … to your project file, you have set it for a qmake based build process. However, Kirigami projects usually use CMake, and that might be the reason why your previous attempts did not work out.

To set QML_IMPORT_PATH for a CMake based build system, you would open the CMakeLists.txt file from the root of your project tree and add the following section on top:

# ------------------------- BEGIN: lists to maintain manually -------------------------

# Directories where Qt Creator can find QML files of Kirigami etc. on your system.
#   (This setting is cached in variable QML_IMPORT_DIR, see below. Delete
#   ${BUIL_DIR}/CMakeCache.txt to make make changes here effective.)
list(APPEND QML_DIRS "/usr/lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/qt5/qml")

# ------------------------- END: lists to maintain manually -------------------------


# Tell Qt Creator where to find QML files.
#   (The build process will work without this, but no code completion etc..)
set(
    QML_IMPORT_PATH "${QML_DIRS}"
    CACHE STRING "Qt Creator 4.1 extra qml import paths"
)

Of course, adapt it to the correct directory for your system. On a Debian / Ubuntu based system, the following will determine the directory containing Kirigami QML files installed from the repositories:

dpkg -L qml-module-org-kde-kirigami2 | grep "\.qml"

Source: another answer on StackOverflow

1
  • 2
    Thanks for the answer, I forgot to answer this question myself as this has been solved in the Qt forum.
    – reckless
    Jun 3, 2020 at 9:45

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

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