A curated list of awesome tools, libraries, and resources for the Qt framework.
Awesome Qt is a curated list of tools, libraries, and resources for the Qt framework, a cross-platform application development framework primarily used for GUI applications. It aggregates official documentation, third-party libraries, language bindings, development tools, and learning materials to help developers build Qt-based software more efficiently.
Qt developers, C++ programmers building cross-platform applications, and anyone seeking to extend their Qt knowledge with community-vetted resources.
It saves developers time by providing a centralized, quality-filtered collection of Qt ecosystem resources, eliminating the need to search scattered sources for reliable tools and libraries.
A curated list of awesome tools, libraries, and resources for the Qt framework.
Open-Awesome is built by the community, for the community. Submit a project, suggest an awesome list, or help improve the catalog on GitHub.
Aggregates official documentation, tools like Qt Creator and Qt Linguist, and third-party libraries such as QScintilla and VLC-Qt in one place, as detailed in the README sections for Tools and Libraries.
Maintained with community contributions, ensuring a diverse and tested collection, evidenced by the 'Contributions are welcome!' note and active GitHub repository.
Includes bindings for Python (PyQt/PySide), .NET (QtSharp), and others, making Qt accessible beyond C++, as listed in the 'Bindings in Other Languages' section.
Features books, blogs, and tutorials from experts and firms like ICS and KDAB, providing varied learning paths, as seen in the 'Blogs' and 'Books' sections.
Relies on community contributions, so it may not always reflect the latest Qt versions or new libraries, risking staleness for cutting-edge development, as there's no automated update mechanism mentioned.
While curated, inclusion is based on community input without formal vetting, potentially leading to biased or outdated recommendations, hinted at by the humorous tone in entries like Qt Newsletters going to 'your spam filter'.
It's a static list; developers must manually browse and integrate resources, unlike tools that offer direct installation, as highlighted by the separate package managers like Qompoter mentioned but not integrated.