# Qt ForkAwesome Library that bundles ForkAwesome for use within Qt applications ## Build instructions The library depends on the following Qt modules (version 5.6 or higher): `core`, `gui` At build time `qtutilities` and `c++utilities` are required. This library is built in the same way as these libraries so checkout the `c++utilities` repository for detailed instructions. To generate the header with icon definitions, Perl and the module `YAML::XS` (or `YAML`) are required. To use a specific Perl binary, one can set the CMake variable `PERL`. Of course the font file and icon definitions for ForkAwesome need to be supplied as well. Just download an archive from https://github.com/ForkAwesome/Fork-Awesome/releases and specify its path via the CMake variables `FORK_AWESOME_FONT_FILE` and `FORK_AWESOME_ICON_DEFINITIONS`, e.g. add `-DFORK_AWESOME_FONT_FILE=/path/to/Fork-Awesome-1.2.0/fonts/forkawesome-webfont.woff2` and `-DFORK_AWESOME_ICON_DEFINITIONS=/path/to/Fork-Awesome-1.2.0/src/icons/icons.yml` to the CMake invocation. The font file will be built into the library and is hence only required at build time. If none of the variables are specified, the build system will attempt to download the files from GitHub. Note that Web Open Font Format 2 (the `.woff2` file) might require FreeType2 to be configured with Brotli support. As usual with CMake projects, it is possible to control whether to build as static or shared library via the `BUILD_SHARED_LIBS` variable. If you build qtforkawesome as part of another project and only want to affect qtforkawesome, you can also use the variable `QT_FORK_AWESOME_BUILD_SHARED_LIBS`. ## Usage The installation provides a CMake find module and a pkg-config file. Once configured, the library is fairly simple to use: ``` #include #include auto renderer = QtForkAwesome::Renderer(); renderer.pixmap(QtForkAwesome::Icon::Globe, QSize(64, 64), Qt::black); ``` There's also `renderer.render(…)` which takes a `QPainter` directly.