![]() ![]() So if you have access to that, you can probably skip the step of building Qt. I’m assuming people with a commercial license can just get compiled binaries from Qt. If you’re going for an open-source build, you will need to build your own Qt instead. I did this on an M2 Mac Mini running macOS 13.5.1 Ventura.įirst of all, before anybody suggests it, you can’t use homebrew to install Qt for this because it doesn’t supply a universal build of Qt. ![]() These instructions are based on Qt 5.15.10 because that is the latest version of 5.x that is currently open source. I’m hoping this post can serve as a reference for people in the future. However, Qt 5.15.9 and later do support creating universal binaries out of the box, so I decided to figure out how to set it all up.Įven though I think I have pretty decent Google-fu, it was difficult to piece everything together to accomplish this goal. It doesn’t currently compile for Qt 6, although I think I can fix that in the future without too much effort. ![]() As part of the update I wanted to release the Mac build as a universal x86_64/arm64 binary so that M1/M2 Mac users would be able to run it natively. I recently released a big update for my Mac ROM SIMM Programmer software which is written using Qt for cross-platform compatibility. ![]()
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