<div dir="ltr">Thanks for your answers Phil.<div><br></div><div>Now, targeting my host system, I'm getting "Unable to unpack qt-everywhere-src-5.11.0.tar.xz", I tried to unpack it myself, and takes like a minute just to open the package manager, is there a way to tell pyqtdeploy-sysroot to use an already extracted folder?.</div><div><br></div><div>In the verbose output it says "unknown archive format" but I was able to extract it by myself, I also tried redownloading it, but seems to be too large.</div></div><br><div class="gmail_quote"><div dir="ltr">El jue., 2 ago. 2018 a las 4:22, Phil Thompson (<<a href="mailto:phil@riverbankcomputing.com">phil@riverbankcomputing.com</a>>) escribió:<br></div><blockquote class="gmail_quote" style="margin:0 0 0 .8ex;border-left:1px #ccc solid;padding-left:1ex">On 1 Aug 2018, at 11:45 pm, Ronald Petit <<a href="mailto:elronaldpetit@gmail.com" target="_blank">elronaldpetit@gmail.com</a>> wrote:<br>
> <br>
> I build the OpenSSL on my host computer (linux 64), and seems like there's a step where you have to build the dependencies, and that step fails over on the pyqtdeploy when targeting android.<br>
> <br>
> I gave up on this, as I can use QtCreator to build APKs, but I still need to get PyQt code coverted to Qt standard C++, is pyqtdeploy capable of that?, in the case of a affirmative answer, I just need to deploy as I'm doing but targeting my host system?<br>
<br>
That's the whole point of pyqtdeploy...<br>
<br>
<a href="http://pyqt.sourceforge.net/Docs/pyqtdeploy/overview.html" rel="noreferrer" target="_blank">http://pyqt.sourceforge.net/Docs/pyqtdeploy/overview.html</a><br>
<br>
Phil</blockquote></div>