Kai Köhne a5de12f0d7 Examples: Use PRIVATE CMake linkage
We (almost) only build apps, for which PRIVATE linkage makes more sense.

Change-Id: I09a509c3fb33a00cdfdede687b3f95d638f42091
Reviewed-by: Jörg Bornemann <joerg.bornemann@qt.io>
2022-11-30 14:48:50 +01:00
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The Address Book Tutorial shows how to put together a simple yet
fully-functioning GUI application. The tutorial chapters can be found in the
Qt documentation, which can be viewed using Qt Assistant or a Web browser.

The tutorial is also available online at

http://qt-project.org/doc/qt-5.0/qtwidgets/tutorials-addressbook.html

All programs corresponding to the chapters in the tutorial should
automatically be built when Qt is compiled, or will be provided as
pre-built executables if you have obtained a binary package of Qt.

If you have only compiled the Qt libraries, use the following instructions
to build the tutorial.

On Linux/Unix:

Typing 'make' in this directory builds all the programs (part1/part1,
part2/part2, part3/part3 and so on). Typing 'make' in each subdirectory
builds just that tutorial program.

On Windows:

Create a single Visual Studio project for the tutorial directory in
the usual way. You can do this by typing the following at the command
line:

qmake -tp vc

You should now be able to open the project file in Visual Studio and
build all of the tutorial programs at the same time.

On Mac OS X:

Create an Xcode project with the .pro file in the tutorial directory.
You can do this by typing the following at the command line:

qmake -spec macx-xcode

Then open the generated Xcode project in Xcode and build it.