On 19/06/12 06:08, Chasc wrote: > On Sun, 2012-06-03 at 00:47 +0300, Nikos Chantziaras wrote: >> On 01/06/12 14:49, Chasc wrote: >>> I have recently developed a C++ desktop application in Linux using Qt >>> Creator and have successfully opened the project in the Windows version >>> of Qt Creator. The app runs successfully in the windows Qt Creator IDE >>> but fails to run independently on the Windows platform. I do not have >>> the same problem in Linux. >>> >>> So how can I package this app to run on other Windows machines using >>> dynamic linking? I have tried including QtGui4.dll, QtCore4.dll, >>> libgcc_s_dw2-1.dll and mingwm10.dll libraries in the release directory >>> but all I get is something about a procedure entry point not being >>> located in QtCore4.dll. I am using Qt 4.7.4. >> >> If you're not using WebKit*, I recommend MXE (http://mxe.cc) for >> building Windows executables directly from Linux. Hasn't let me down yet. >> >> * WebKit is broken for static linking. > > OK, I have MXE working like a charm. Thanks! The problem though is that > it builds everything statically. I am not sure how this sits with > Nokia's LGPL licence agreement although my software is not for sale and > is only being used in-house. How would I get on publishing a GPL app? > (Pardon my ignorance here)
As Diego mentioned, you're not affected then by the license. The GPL is a "General Public License". It applies to the general public. In-house does not qualify as the general public, therefore, you don't need to do anything :-) _______________________________________________ Interest mailing list Interest@qt-project.org http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/interest