ladybird/Documentation/QtCreatorConfiguration.md
Ben Wiederhake 6c85088952 Documentation: Update QtCreator setup instructions
The biggest difference is that -m32 is no longer important, and in fact
breaks every 64-bit setup.

Also, defining ENABLE_UNICODE_DATA, ENABLE_COMPILETIME_FORMAT_CHECK, and
__SSE__ makes some code "visible" in the #ifdef sense, which improves
syntax highlighting.
2023-01-05 13:20:54 +01:00

5.2 KiB

Qt Creator Project Configuration

Setup

First, make sure you have a working toolchain and can build and run SerenityOS. Go here for instructions for setting that up.

  • Install Qt Creator. You don't need the entire Qt setup, just click 'Qt Creator' on the left side, and install that.
  • Open Qt Creator, select File -> New File or Project...
  • Select Import Existing Project
  • Give it a name (some tools assume lower-case serenity), and navigate to the root of your SerenityOS project checkout. Click Next.
  • Wait for the file list to generate. This can take a minute or two!
  • Ignore the file list, we will overwrite it later. Click Next.
  • Set Add to version control to <None>. Click Finish.
  • In your shell, go to your SerenityOS project directory, and invoke the Meta/refresh-serenity-qtcreator.sh script to regenerate the serenity.files file. You will also have to do this every time you delete or add a new file to the project.
  • Edit the serenity.config file (In Qt Creator, hit ^K or CMD+K on a Mac to open the search dialog, type the name of the file and hit return to open it)
  • Add the following #defines to the file:
    //#define KERNEL
    
    #define ENABLE_UNICODE_DATA 1
    //#define ENABLE_COMPILETIME_FORMAT_CHECK
    
    #define __serenity__
    #define SANITIZE_PTRS 1
    #define __SSE__
    
    If you're working on the Kernel, just uncomment #define KERNEL.
  • Edit the serenity.cxxflags file to say -std=c++20 -fsigned-char -fconcepts -fno-exceptions -fno-semantic-interposition -fPIC
  • Edit the serenity.includes file to list the following lines:
    ./
    Userland/
    Userland/Libraries/
    Userland/Libraries/LibC/
    Userland/Libraries/LibSystem/
    Userland/Services/
    Toolchain/Local/x86_64/x86_64-pc-serenity/include/c++/12.2.0
    Build/x86_64/
    Build/x86_64/Userland/
    Build/x86_64/Userland/Libraries/
    Build/x86_64/Userland/Services/
    AK/
    

Finally, search in the options for "BOM" (Text Editor > Behavior > File Encodings > UTF-8 BOM), and switch to "Always delete".

Qt Creator should be set up correctly now, go ahead and explore the project and try making changes. Have fun! :^)

Auto-Formatting

You can use clang-format to help you with the style guide. Before you proceed, check that you're actually using clang-format version 15, as some OSes will ship older clang-format versions by default.

  • In QtCreator, go to "Help > About Plugins…"
  • Find the Beautifier (experimental) row (for example, by typing beau into the search)
  • Put a checkmark into the box
  • Restart QtCreator if it asks you
  • In QtCreator, go to "Tools > Options…"
  • Type "beau" in the search box, go to "Beautifier > Clang Format"
  • Select the "customized" style, click "edit"
  • Paste the entire content of the file .clang-format into the "value" box, and click "OK"
  • In the "Beautifier > General" tab, check "Enable auto format on file save"
  • Select the tool "ClangFormat" if not already selected, and click "OK"

Note that not the entire project is clang-format-clean (yet), so sometimes you will see large diffs. Use your own judgement whether you want to include such changes. Generally speaking, if it's a few lines then it's a good idea; if it's the entire file then maybe there's a better way to do it, like doing a separate commit, or just ignoring the clang-format changes.

You may want to read up what git add -p does (or git checkout -p, to undo).

QtCreator tends to interpret IPC definitions as C++ headers, and then tries to format them. This is not useful. One way to avoid that is telling QtCreator that IPC definitions are not C++ headers.

  • In QtCreator, go to "Tools > Options…"
  • Type "beau" in the search box, go to "Environment > MIME Types"
  • In the little search box, type "plain", and select "text/plain"
  • In the "details" section, you should now see the list of Patterns, something like *.txt;*.asc;*,v. Extend it in the following way: *.txt;*.asc;*,v;*.ipc;*.gml
  • Click "OK" to close the dialog.
  • Maybe you need to close and open again the IPC files. You can check what QtCreator is doing by right-clicking the filename in the editor tab, and clicking "Properties...". In the third line, you should see MIME type: text/plain.

License template

You may have noticed how Andreas just types lic and the license appears.

In order to so, create a new file anywhere, for example license-template.creator, with the standard license:

/*
 * Copyright (c) 2023, the SerenityOS developers.
 *
 * SPDX-License-Identifier: BSD-2-Clause
 */

In QtCreator, select the menu "Tools", item "Options", section "C++", tab "File Naming" (don't ask me why it's here). At the bottom there should be the option "License template:". Click "Browse…", select your file (i.e., license-template.creator). Click "OK", and you're done! :)

Compiler Kits

You can slightly improve how well Qt interprets the code by adding and setting up an appropriate "compiler kit". For that you will need to reference the compilers at Toolchain/Local/x86_64/bin/x86_64-pc-serenity-gcc and Toolchain/Local/x86_64/bin/x86_64-pc-serenity-g++.