You can define the QT_NO_KEYWORDS macro, that disables the “signals” and “slots” macros.
If you use QMake:
CONFIG += no_keywords
If you’re using another build system, do whatever it needs to pass -DQT_NO_KEYWORDS
to the compiler.
Defining QT_NO_KEYWORDS will require you to change occurrences of signals
to Q_SIGNALS
and slots
to Q_SLOTS
in your Qt code.
If you cannot change all the Qt code, e.g. because you're using third-party libraries not being "keyword-clean", you could try to undefine "signals" locally before including cdk.h:
#undef signals
#include <cdk.h>
I'd recommend to use no_keywords though if possible, as it is less tedious and error-prone.
http://stackoverflow.com/questions/22188432/cdk-collides-with-qt-signals