- Qt 5.15.x source packages
- 5.12.x Offline Installers
- 5.9.x Offline Installers
- Qt Creator
- Other downloads
- Pre-releases
Qt Creator
Qt Creator 4.13.0 is released and it is available via Qt online installer. If you need a standalone installer, please select the file according to your operating system from the list below to get the latest Qt Creator for your computer.
Download mingw-install for free. MinGW-install provides a full runtime environment for the latest tested MinGW packages, including autoconf, automake, libtool and gettext. This gives a way of building native Windows applications using GCC without the difficulty of installing MSYS. Click Mingw-w64 to download the Windows Mingw-w64 installer. Run the installer. For Architecture select x8664 and then select Next. Next again to use the default installation folder and install MinGW. Add the path to your Mingw-w64 bin folder to the Windows PATH environment variable by using the following steps.
- Qt Creator 4.13.0 for Windows (270 MB)(info)
- Qt Creator 4.13.0 for Windows 64-bit (287 MB)(info)
- Qt Creator 4.13.0 for Linux 64-bit (202 MB)(info)
- Qt Creator 4.13.0 for macOS (188 MB)(info)
The source code is available as a zip (56 MB) (Info) or a tar.gz (44 MB) (Info). Or visit the repository at code.qt.io.
Be sure to check if Qt is supported on your platform and read the installation notes that are located in theQt Documentation.
- Visual Studio Add-in 2.5.2 for Qt5 MSVC 2019 (17 MB)(info)
- Visual Studio Add-in 2.5.2 for Qt5 MSVC 2017 (17 MB)(info)
- Visual Studio Add-in 2.5.2 for Qt5 MSVC 2015 (16 MB)(info)
- Visual Studio Add-in 1.2.5 for Qt5 (202 MB)(info)
- Visual Studio Add-in 1.1.11 for Qt4 (112 MB)(info)
Pre-releases
Looking for Qt Creator 4.13.0 rc1. You can find it here.
Setting up a Matlab compatible MinGW compiler in Windows
◼ For Matlab R2015b up to R2017a, you can use MinGW 4.9.2 TDM-GCC.
◼ For Matlab R2017b, MinGW 5.3 is required.
Instructions are given below for both categories. ◼ For Matlab R2017b, MinGW 5.3 is required.
Matlab R2015b up to R2017a
► Download the compiler binary file ->link: tdm64-gcc-4.9.2-3.exe
► Uncheck box 'Check for updated files on the TDM-GCC server'.
► Create a new TDM-GCC installation.
► Select 'MinGW-w64/TDM64'.
► Choose an installation directory. Default = C:TDM-GCC-64
► If you are going to write programs with parallel computations, make sure to check OpenMP in optional components - gcc.
► In front of gcc section, make sure that the correct version 4.9.2 is given; if not, you probably forgot to uncheck updates in the beginning.
► Uncheck box 'Check for updated files on the TDM-GCC server'.
► Create a new TDM-GCC installation.
► Select 'MinGW-w64/TDM64'.
► Choose an installation directory. Default = C:TDM-GCC-64
► If you are going to write programs with parallel computations, make sure to check OpenMP in optional components - gcc.
► In front of gcc section, make sure that the correct version 4.9.2 is given; if not, you probably forgot to uncheck updates in the beginning.
Now, to inform the path of the compiler to Matlab, you can write in Matlab command-window, or directly in your m-file the following command.
Replace the given default installation path of the compiler, if you changed it.
Replace the given default installation path of the compiler, if you changed it.
Steam key generator activation key. To test whether the compiler is set correctly, type the following command in the Matlab Command Window
In Matlab R2017a, it gives you the following output:
Matlab R2017b
► Download and run mingw-w64 installer file ->link: mingw-w64-install.exe
► Select the proper version (5.3.0) and architecture (in my case 'x86_64').
► Choose the destination folder for installation (in my case 'C:mingw-w64x86_64-5.3.0-posix-seh-rt_v4-rev0') and go to next steps.
► Select the proper version (5.3.0) and architecture (in my case 'x86_64').
► Choose the destination folder for installation (in my case 'C:mingw-w64x86_64-5.3.0-posix-seh-rt_v4-rev0') and go to next steps.
Mingw Offline Installer Version
After installation, to inform the path of the compiler to Matlab, you can write in Matlab command-window, or directly in your m-file the following command.
To test whether the compiler is set correctly, type the following command in the Matlab Command Window
This should give you the following output:
Example for building mex function
In the following files, you can try to build a test mex function. Both files should be in an identical folder.
mex_function_test.cpp compile.m Mingw Offline Installer
![Mingw Mingw](https://automagiclab.com/swdruwoo/download-mingw-w64-offline-installer-questions-luwjgmrk-humpqzst.jpg)
Mingw Offline Installer Windows 10
After running 'compile.m', you should be able to see the output message 'From C++: Hello world!' in the Matlab command window.