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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