Jake,
Thanks a lot for the quick and complete answer.
On 7/4/2014 11:51 PM, Jake Petroules wrote:
> On 2014-07-04, at 04:31 PM, Pavel Mogilevskiy <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Hello everyone!
>>
>> I would like to ask you if it's possible to submit my Qt
>> application for iOS to iOS App Store. I already sent the same question
>> to Qt Interests but
>> didn't get a 100% answer. Maybe here I will get the full answer.
>>
>> What are requirements of submitting apps to iOS App Store? Are
>> there any restriction? I heard that Apple doesn't allow to submit
>> applications that bundle dylibs to iOS App Store? Is this true?
>>
>> Thanks for any information.
>>
>> I'm using Qt 5.3.1 LGPL, iOS SDK 7.1. Application has been
>> written with Qt Widgets (non QtQuick/QML).
>>
>> Thanks!
>>
>> --
>> Best regards,
>> Pavel Mogilevskiy mailto:[email protected]
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Development mailing list
>> [email protected]
>> http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/development
>
> Yes, you can submit your Qt-based application to the iOS App Store, this is
> officially supported by Qt. It's true that you cannot use dylibs if you want
> your application to run on iOS 7.x or earlier. Future versions of iOS will
> lift this restriction.
>
> Regarding the other requirements/restrictions, please see Apple's
> documentation here
> https://developer.apple.com/appstore/resources/approval/guidelines.html and
> here https://developer.apple.com/app-store/review/ for more information.
>
> Statically linking LGPL-licensed code such as Qt in your application also has
> certain legal requirements. If your application is open source, there is no
> step 2. However, if your application is closed source, the LGPL license
> dictates that you must provide a way for end users to re-link with a
> different version of Qt. Generally you'd fulfill this license requirement by
> providing the necessary object files and Makefiles to rebuild your
> application. In either case you must also provide attribution that you used
> Qt (in your about page or in the documentation somewhere). If these
> requirements are not suitable for your application, you may instead purchase
> a commercial Qt license from Digia here: http://qt.digia.com/buy/
>
> Disclaimer: I am not a lawyer and this is not legal advice. Please contact a
> qualified legal professional for more information if necessary.
>
> I hope this answers your questions.
--
Best regards,
Pavel Mogilevskiy mailto:[email protected]
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