Add a new tool or a Qt tool wrapper#
Tooling is essential to Qt for Python, for that reason you can find many ad-hoc tools in the repository, which include wrappers of Qt tools or newly developed tools to solve issues, or improve some project workflows.
Add a new tool#
Tools not available to end users#
This depicts the tools that are not shipped with Qt for Python wheels and are used to aid Qt for Python development
Place your tool in the
tools
directory.If your project has more than one file, create a directory.
Create a
.pyproject
file including all the relevant files for your tool.
Tools available to end users#
Place your tool in the
sources/pyside-tools
directory.If your project has more than one file, create a directory.
Create a
.pyproject
file including all the relevant files for your tool.Add the relevant files in
sources/pyside-tools/CMakeLists.txt
.Add the tool in
sources/pyside-tools/pyside_tool.py
.Add the tool in
build_scripts/__init__.py
to create the setuptools entry points i.e. this enable using the tool from the console as “pyside6-<tool_name>”Add an entry to
sources/pyside6/doc/gettingstarted/package_details.rst
.Include the necessary Qt binaries explicitly on
build_scripts/wheel_files.py
Build with
--standalone
, verify it is working.
Add a Qt tool wrapper#
Add the relevant files in
sources/pyside-tools/CMakeLists.txt
.Add the tool in
sources/pyside-tools/pyside_tool.py
.Add the tool in
build_scripts/__init__.py
to create the setuptools entry points i.e. this enable using the tool from the console as “pyside6-<tool_name>”Add an entry to
sources/pyside6/doc/gettingstarted/package_details.rst
.Include the necessary Qt binaries explicitly on
build_scripts/wheel_files.py
Build with
--standalone
, verify it is working.