To show off multi-touch support, here’s a simple hand painting demorunning on a Nexus 4. This also shows the support for native menus:
The lowest Android API level supported by Qt 5 is API level 10, akaAndroid version 2.3.3. This means we can also have Qt apps running onreasonably priced devices, such as this Huawei Y100:
Here’s the overview of what we have right now: •Support for creating Qt Widgets and Qt Quick apps that run on Android devices. •Support for Android API level 10 (version 2.3.3) and up. •QML media player functionality in QtMultimedia. •A set of commonly used sensors in QtSensors. •Cross-platform features of Qt of course (including Qt Quick controls and QtGraphicalEffects.) •Developing and configuring apps in Qt Creator 2.7. •Deploying a test build to a device directly from Qt Creator.毕业论文
In addition, we plan to soon support the possibility of distributingthe Qt libraries through the Ministro distribution tool, which allowsyou to share a set of Qt libraries across several apps on a device, andwhich will be the primary way of deploying apps with Qt 5.1. Other thanthat, this is all already available: Just check out the wikiforinstructions. Let us know if anything goes horribly wrong. We canusually be found in the #necessitas channel on the Freenode IRC servers. What’s next, you ask? You can in fact help us decide! Both by reporting your bug findings and feature expectations to us, and by contributing your code. We will be working steadily on improving Qt 5 for Android, and would benefit greatly from your feedback. In the wiki,we are also compiling a list of devices where Qt has been verified torun. If you take the time to add devices you have tested to the listthere (as well as any issues you have found), it would very much beappreciated Finally: A big thanks to BogDan Vatra, Ray Donnelly and everyone elsewho has been contributing to the Necessitas project for the past years,as well as Qt 5 for Android in the past months. And thanks to everyonewho will contribute in the future. 上一页 [1] [2]
|