![]() ![]() And, if you deploy your Qt application on an embedded device, you must pay royalties. Of course, you must pay for one license per developer. If you use Qt under commercial license, nothing has changed for you. Let me bring some clarity into this patchwork and explain how you can still use Qt under LGPL and sleep well. Some companies stay on Qt 5.3, because they are afraid of LGPLv3. With Qt 5.6, we now have quite a patchwork of modules under different licenses. Starting with Qt 5.4, new Qt modules were published under LGPLv3 and old modules additionally under LGPLv3. Most modules were under LGPLv2.1 with the exception of some commercial modules. ![]()
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