If a library does not support a particular version of Qt 5, it is best to mark it as broken by setting its <literal>meta.broken</literal> attribute.
A package may be marked broken for certain versions by testing the <literal>qtbase.version</literal> attribute, which will always give the current Qt 5 version.
Qt 5 maintains strict backward compatibility, so it is generally best to build an application package against the latest version using the <varname>libsForQt5</varname> library set.
In case a package does not build with the latest Qt version, it is possible to pick a set pinned to a particular version, e.g. <varname>libsForQt55</varname> for Qt 5.5, if that is the latest version the package supports.
If a package must be pinned to an older Qt version, be sure to file a bug upstream;
because Qt is strictly backwards-compatible, any incompatibility is by definition a bug in the application.
When testing applications in Nixpkgs, it is a common practice to build the package with <literal>nix-build</literal> and run it using the created symbolic link.
This will not work with Qt applications, however, because they have many hard runtime requirements that can only be guaranteed if the package is actually installed.
To test a Qt application, install it with <literal>nix-env</literal> or run it inside <literal>nix-shell</literal>.