import QtQuick 2.0 Column { id: root width: parent.width spacing: engine.smallFontSize() Title { text: "Boot to Qt vs Qt for Android" } ContentText { width: parent.width text: '

Qt for Android is a port of the Qt Framework to be used for application development on the Android platform. Its purpose is to enable development of applications that can run on Android devices. For developers writing applications for the Android ecosystem, Qt for Android is the right choice.

Boot to Qt for embedded Android tries to strip down the Android stack to the bare minimum, relying only on basic Linux features. The majority of the Android stack, such as Dalvik virtual machine is not running in Boot to Qt, resulting in faster startup times, lower memory consumption and overall better performance.' } Column { id: diagram spacing: 1 width: parent.width * 0.66 anchors.horizontalCenter: parent.horizontalCenter Box { text: "Application"; accentColor: "coral" } Box { text: "Qt for Android"; accentColor: Qt.rgba(0.64, 0.82, 0.15) } Row { width: parent.width height: b.height Box { id: b; width: parent.width / 2; text: "Qt Framework"; accentColor: Qt.rgba(0.64, 0.82, 0.15) } Box { width: parent.width / 2; text: "Android (Dalvik)"; accentColor: "steelblue" } } Box { text: "Android Baselayer"; accentColor: "steelblue" } Box { text: "Embedded Hardware"; accentColor: "steelblue"} } ContentText { width: parent.width text: '

Boot to Qt for embedded Linux is build from scratch using Yocto 1.4 tools to contain only components required in the embedded device, resulting in smaller image sizes while keeping valuable development tools available.' } }