wxWidgets/samples/xrc/Makefile.in

213 lines
9.3 KiB
Makefile
Raw Normal View History

# =========================================================================
# This makefile was generated by
# Bakefile 0.1.4 (http://bakefile.sourceforge.net)
# Do not modify, all changes will be overwritten!
# =========================================================================
Applied [ 594925 ] Implement wxArtProvider and XRC together By Robert O'Connor (robertoconnor) This patch is a draft which successfully allows a wxArtProvider to serve out icons to bitmaps for XRC files. The syntax to use a wxArtProvider bitmap is: <bitmap stock_id="wxART_INFORMATION" stock_client="wxART_TOOLBAR">somefallbackicon.png</bitmap> The bitmap is optional, and will only be used as a fallback image, if the wxArtProvider returned a wxNullBitmap for some reason. The client attribute, if not specified, currently will be wxART_OTHER. Perhaps there should be a guessing heuristic of it being in a menu node to call wxART_MENU. Usage of XRC resouces and wxArtProvider together can be seen in an updated /contrib/samples/xrc demo, which is a separate patch. Search the wx-dev mailing lists for "wxArtProvider" and "XRC" for the full discussions on this feature's API design. Applied patch [ 594932 ] Extended XRC XML resources sample By Robert O'Connor (robertoconnor) This is a more comprehensive introduction to how to get up and running using XRC in your new wxWindows project. It describes both the basics (for new users) and advanced features. It consists of a demo of dialogs and frames loaded from XRC. Each dialog has a textctrl at the top of the dialog, which walks the new user through that feature. There are 8 demos: The 4 basic ones: -A non-derived dialog, as typically used for an about dialog. -A derived dialog that loads its resources from an XRC (a frequently-asked question on the mailing lists), and responds to some simple events, including the disable-another-control-via-EVT_UPDATE_UI that is another FAQ, and powerful and simple-to-use feature. -A XRC reference "Controls" dialog, using a notebook. Each tab has a single control. All XRC handled widgets can be seen at a glance, and how to use them under XRC. -An uncentered dialog, to demonstrate the easy use of <centered>1</centered> to automatically place a Dialog centered on its parent.. The 4 advanced ones: -Embedding a custom class into an XRC dialog, by using the "unknown" class. -Using wxArtProvider to use stock icons from within your your XRC resources. -Using the platform attribute to selectively show a part of XRC based on the current OS. -Runtime variable expansion (demo only. Not implemented at this time). Also: -The main frame is now demonstrated as being loaded as an XRC. - The toolbar has longhelp tag demonstrated, and are hooked up to the same events as the menu to show how XRCID() works on the same tool and menuitem XRCID. -Some custom icons for the demonstration were created, and put into the toolbar and menubar. A custom icon also for the demonstration. -The example code has been put in 1 class per file (both .cpp and a matching .xrc), to make it much less confusing for a newcomer to figure out what class is what, expecially with all the wx macros for declaration and implementation. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@16542 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2002-08-16 07:24:46 -04:00
@MAKE_SET@
prefix = @prefix@
exec_prefix = @exec_prefix@
INSTALL = @INSTALL@
EXEEXT = @EXEEXT@
RESCOMP = @RESCOMP@
SETFILE = @SETFILE@
NM = @NM@
srcdir = @srcdir@
top_srcdir = @top_srcdir@
top_builddir = @top_builddir@
LDFLAGS_GUI = @LDFLAGS_GUI@
CXX = @CXX@
CXXFLAGS = @CXXFLAGS@
CPPFLAGS = @CPPFLAGS@
LDFLAGS = @LDFLAGS@
WX_LIB_FLAVOUR = @WX_LIB_FLAVOUR@
TOOLKIT = @TOOLKIT@
TOOLKIT_LOWERCASE = @TOOLKIT_LOWERCASE@
TOOLKIT_VERSION = @TOOLKIT_VERSION@
TOOLCHAIN_NAME = @TOOLCHAIN_NAME@
EXTRALIBS = @EXTRALIBS@
EXTRALIBS_XML = @EXTRALIBS_XML@
EXTRALIBS_HTML = @EXTRALIBS_HTML@
EXTRALIBS_GUI = @EXTRALIBS_GUI@
EXTRALIBS_SDL = @EXTRALIBS_SDL@
HOST_SUFFIX = @HOST_SUFFIX@
SAMPLES_RPATH_FLAG = @SAMPLES_RPATH_FLAG@
SAMPLES_RPATH_POSTLINK = @SAMPLES_RPATH_POSTLINK@
### Variables: ###
DESTDIR =
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
WX_RELEASE = 2.5
WX_VERSION = $(WX_RELEASE).3
LIBDIRNAME = $(top_builddir)lib
XRCDEMO_CXXFLAGS = -D__WX$(TOOLKIT)__ $(__WXUNIV_DEFINE_p) -I$(srcdir) \
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
$(__DLLFLAG_p) -I$(srcdir)/../../samples $(CPPFLAGS) $(CXXFLAGS)
XRCDEMO_OBJECTS = \
$(__xrcdemo_os2_lib_res) \
xrcdemo_xrcdemo.o \
xrcdemo_myframe.o \
xrcdemo_derivdlg.o \
xrcdemo_custclas.o \
$(__xrcdemo___win32rc)
### Conditionally set variables: ###
@COND_DEPS_TRACKING_0@CXXC = $(CXX)
@COND_DEPS_TRACKING_1@CXXC = $(top_builddir)./bk-deps $(CXX)
@COND_USE_PLUGINS_0@PLUGIN_ADV_EXTRALIBS = $(EXTRALIBS_SDL)
@COND_USE_GUI_0@PORTNAME = base
@COND_USE_GUI_1@PORTNAME = $(TOOLKIT_LOWERCASE)$(TOOLKIT_VERSION)
@COND_TOOLKIT_MAC@WXBASEPORT = _carbon
@COND_BUILD_DEBUG_DEBUG_FLAG_DEFAULT@WXDEBUGFLAG = d
@COND_DEBUG_FLAG_1@WXDEBUGFLAG = d
@COND_UNICODE_1@WXUNICODEFLAG = u
@COND_WXUNIV_1@WXUNIVNAME = univ
@COND_MONOLITHIC_0@EXTRALIBS_FOR_BASE = $(EXTRALIBS)
@COND_MONOLITHIC_1@EXTRALIBS_FOR_BASE = $(EXTRALIBS) $(EXTRALIBS_GUI)
@COND_MONOLITHIC_0@EXTRALIBS_FOR_GUI = $(EXTRALIBS_GUI)
@COND_MONOLITHIC_1@EXTRALIBS_FOR_GUI =
@COND_PLATFORM_MAC_1@__xrcdemo___mac_setfilecmd = \
@COND_PLATFORM_MAC_1@ $(SETFILE) -a C xrcdemo$(EXEEXT)
@COND_PLATFORM_MAC_1@__xrcdemo___mac_rezcmd = $(__MACOSX_RESOURCES_p_1)
@COND_WXUNIV_1@__WXUNIV_DEFINE_p = -D__WXUNIVERSAL__
@COND_WXUNIV_1@__WXUNIV_DEFINE_p_1 = -d __WXUNIVERSAL__
@COND_WXUNIV_1@__WXUNIV_DEFINE_p_2 = --define __WXUNIVERSAL__
@COND_SHARED_1@__DLLFLAG_p = -DWXUSINGDLL
@COND_SHARED_1@__DLLFLAG_p_1 = -d WXUSINGDLL
@COND_SHARED_1@__DLLFLAG_p_2 = --define WXUSINGDLL
COND_PLATFORM_OS2_1___xrcdemo___os2_emxbindcmd = $(NM) xrcdemo$(EXEEXT) | if \
grep -q pmwin.763 ; then emxbind -ep xrcdemo$(EXEEXT) ; fi
@COND_PLATFORM_OS2_1@__xrcdemo___os2_emxbindcmd = $(COND_PLATFORM_OS2_1___xrcdemo___os2_emxbindcmd)
@COND_PLATFORM_OS2_1@__xrcdemo_os2_lib_res = \
@COND_PLATFORM_OS2_1@ $(top_srcdir)/include/wx/os2/wx.res
@COND_PLATFORM_MACOSX_1@__xrcdemo_bundle___depname = xrcdemo_bundle
@COND_TOOLKIT_COCOA@____xrcdemo_BUNDLE_TGT_REF_DEP = \
@COND_TOOLKIT_COCOA@ xrcdemo.app/Contents/PkgInfo
@COND_TOOLKIT_MAC@____xrcdemo_BUNDLE_TGT_REF_DEP = \
@COND_TOOLKIT_MAC@ xrcdemo.app/Contents/PkgInfo
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_XRC_p = \
-lwx_$(PORTNAME)$(WXUNIVNAME)$(WXUNICODEFLAG)$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)_xrc-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
@COND_MONOLITHIC_0@__WXLIB_XRC_p = $(COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_XRC_p)
COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_HTML_p = \
-lwx_$(PORTNAME)$(WXUNIVNAME)$(WXUNICODEFLAG)$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)_html-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
@COND_MONOLITHIC_0@__WXLIB_HTML_p = $(COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_HTML_p)
COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_ADV_p = \
-lwx_$(PORTNAME)$(WXUNIVNAME)$(WXUNICODEFLAG)$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)_adv-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
@COND_MONOLITHIC_0@__WXLIB_ADV_p = $(COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_ADV_p)
COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_CORE_p = \
-lwx_$(PORTNAME)$(WXUNIVNAME)$(WXUNICODEFLAG)$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)_core-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
@COND_MONOLITHIC_0@__WXLIB_CORE_p = $(COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_CORE_p)
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_XML_p = \
-lwx_base$(WXBASEPORT)$(WXUNICODEFLAG)$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)_xml-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
@COND_MONOLITHIC_0@__WXLIB_XML_p = $(COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_XML_p)
COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_BASE_p = \
-lwx_base$(WXBASEPORT)$(WXUNICODEFLAG)$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
@COND_MONOLITHIC_0@__WXLIB_BASE_p = $(COND_MONOLITHIC_0___WXLIB_BASE_p)
@COND_PLATFORM_WIN32_1@__xrcdemo___win32rc = xrcdemo_xrcdemo_rc.o
COND_MONOLITHIC_1___WXLIB_MONO_p = \
-lwx_$(PORTNAME)$(WXUNIVNAME)$(WXUNICODEFLAG)$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
@COND_MONOLITHIC_1@__WXLIB_MONO_p = $(COND_MONOLITHIC_1___WXLIB_MONO_p)
@COND_USE_GUI_1_WXUSE_LIBTIFF_BUILTIN@__LIB_TIFF_p \
@COND_USE_GUI_1_WXUSE_LIBTIFF_BUILTIN@ = \
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
@COND_USE_GUI_1_WXUSE_LIBTIFF_BUILTIN@ -lwxtiff$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
@COND_USE_GUI_1_WXUSE_LIBJPEG_BUILTIN@__LIB_JPEG_p \
@COND_USE_GUI_1_WXUSE_LIBJPEG_BUILTIN@ = \
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
@COND_USE_GUI_1_WXUSE_LIBJPEG_BUILTIN@ -lwxjpeg$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
@COND_USE_GUI_1_WXUSE_LIBPNG_BUILTIN@__LIB_PNG_p \
@COND_USE_GUI_1_WXUSE_LIBPNG_BUILTIN@ = \
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
@COND_USE_GUI_1_WXUSE_LIBPNG_BUILTIN@ -lwxpng$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
@COND_WXUSE_ZLIB_BUILTIN@__LIB_ZLIB_p = \
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
@COND_WXUSE_ZLIB_BUILTIN@ -lwxzlib$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
@COND_WXUSE_ODBC_BUILTIN@__LIB_ODBC_p = \
@COND_WXUSE_ODBC_BUILTIN@ -lwxodbc$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
COND_WXUSE_REGEX_BUILTIN___LIB_REGEX_p = \
-lwxregex$(WXUNICODEFLAG)$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
@COND_WXUSE_REGEX_BUILTIN@__LIB_REGEX_p = $(COND_WXUSE_REGEX_BUILTIN___LIB_REGEX_p)
@COND_WXUSE_EXPAT_BUILTIN@__LIB_EXPAT_p = \
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
@COND_WXUSE_EXPAT_BUILTIN@ -lwxexpat$(WXDEBUGFLAG)$(WX_LIB_FLAVOUR)-$(WX_RELEASE)$(HOST_SUFFIX)
COND_TOOLKIT_MAC___MACOSX_RESOURCES_p_1 = $(RESCOMP) -d __DARWIN__ -t APPL -d \
__WX$(TOOLKIT)__ $(__WXUNIV_DEFINE_p_1) -i $(srcdir) $(__DLLFLAG_p_1) -i \
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
$(srcdir)/../../samples -i $(top_srcdir)/include -o xrcdemo$(EXEEXT) Carbon.r \
$(LIBDIRNAME)/libwx_$(TOOLCHAIN_NAME).3.r sample.r
@COND_TOOLKIT_MAC@__MACOSX_RESOURCES_p_1 = $(COND_TOOLKIT_MAC___MACOSX_RESOURCES_p_1)
### Targets: ###
all: xrcdemo$(EXEEXT) $(__xrcdemo_bundle___depname) data
install: all
uninstall:
install-strip: install
clean:
rm -rf ./.deps ./.pch
rm -f ./*.o
rm -f xrcdemo$(EXEEXT)
rm -rf xrcdemo.app
distclean: clean
rm -f configure config.cache config.log config.status bk-deps bk-make-pch shared-ld-sh Makefile
xrcdemo$(EXEEXT): $(XRCDEMO_OBJECTS) $(__xrcdemo___win32rc)
$(CXX) -o $@ $(XRCDEMO_OBJECTS) $(LDFLAGS) -L$(LIBDIRNAME) $(LDFLAGS_GUI) $(SAMPLES_RPATH_FLAG) $(__WXLIB_XRC_p) $(__WXLIB_HTML_p) $(EXTRALIBS_HTML) $(__WXLIB_ADV_p) $(PLUGIN_ADV_EXTRALIBS) $(__WXLIB_CORE_p) $(__WXLIB_XML_p) $(EXTRALIBS_XML) $(__WXLIB_BASE_p) $(__WXLIB_MONO_p) $(__LIB_TIFF_p) $(__LIB_JPEG_p) $(__LIB_PNG_p) $(__LIB_ZLIB_p) $(__LIB_ODBC_p) $(__LIB_REGEX_p) $(__LIB_EXPAT_p) $(EXTRALIBS_FOR_BASE) $(EXTRALIBS_FOR_GUI)
$(__xrcdemo___mac_rezcmd)
$(__xrcdemo___mac_setfilecmd)
$(__xrcdemo___os2_emxbindcmd)
$(SAMPLES_RPATH_POSTLINK)
xrcdemo.app/Contents/PkgInfo: xrcdemo$(EXEEXT) $(top_srcdir)/src/mac/carbon/Info.plist.in $(LIBDIRNAME)/libwx_$(TOOLCHAIN_NAME).3.rsrc $(top_srcdir)/src/mac/carbon/wxmac.icns
mkdir -p xrcdemo.app/Contents
mkdir -p xrcdemo.app/Contents/MacOS
mkdir -p xrcdemo.app/Contents/Resources
sed -e "s/IDENTIFIER/`echo $(srcdir) | sed -e 's,\.\./,,g' | sed -e 's,/,.,g'`/" \
-e "s/EXECUTABLE/xrcdemo/" \
-e "s/VERSION/$(WX_VERSION)/" \
$(top_srcdir)/src/mac/carbon/Info.plist.in >xrcdemo.app/Contents/Info.plist
echo -n "APPL????" >xrcdemo.app/Contents/PkgInfo
ln -f xrcdemo$(EXEEXT) xrcdemo.app/Contents/MacOS/xrcdemo
cp -f $(LIBDIRNAME)/libwx_$(TOOLCHAIN_NAME).3.rsrc xrcdemo.app/Contents/Resources/xrcdemo.rsrc
cp -f $(top_srcdir)/src/mac/carbon/wxmac.icns xrcdemo.app/Contents/Resources/wxmac.icns
@COND_PLATFORM_MACOSX_1@xrcdemo_bundle: $(____xrcdemo_BUNDLE_TGT_REF_DEP)
data:
@mkdir -p ./rc
@for f in appicon.ico appicon.xpm artprov.xpm artprov.xrc basicdlg.xpm basicdlg.xrc controls.xpm controls.xrc custclas.xpm custclas.xrc derivdlg.xpm derivdlg.xrc fileopen.gif filesave.gif frame.xrc fuzzy.gif menu.xrc platform.xpm platform.xrc quotes.gif resource.xrc scanning.gif sppicon.ico toolbar.xrc uncenter.xpm uncenter.xrc update.gif variable.xpm variable.xrc; do \
if test \( ! -s ./rc/$$f \) -o \( $(srcdir)/rc/$$f -nt ./rc/$$f \) ; then \
cp -pRf $(srcdir)/rc/$$f ./rc ; \
fi; \
done
xrcdemo_xrcdemo.o: $(srcdir)/xrcdemo.cpp
$(CXXC) -c -o $@ $(XRCDEMO_CXXFLAGS) $<
xrcdemo_myframe.o: $(srcdir)/myframe.cpp
$(CXXC) -c -o $@ $(XRCDEMO_CXXFLAGS) $<
xrcdemo_derivdlg.o: $(srcdir)/derivdlg.cpp
$(CXXC) -c -o $@ $(XRCDEMO_CXXFLAGS) $<
xrcdemo_custclas.o: $(srcdir)/custclas.cpp
$(CXXC) -c -o $@ $(XRCDEMO_CXXFLAGS) $<
xrcdemo_xrcdemo_rc.o: $(srcdir)/xrcdemo.rc
wx-config2.6 Designed to be resiliant against future cut and paste coders. Any gnarly parts are black boxed away nicely to avoid accidents and have integrated debugging support for trivial sanity checking in the event of modification or trouble. In this way the major operations are all cleanly separated making any or all of them simply extensible, or replaceable in the face of future needs. Functions now all have api descriptions. If you rely on a function to act in some way, please document it to safeguard yourself against inadvertant interface changes by others. Everything now runs top top to bottom, we don't try to output things as fast as we can read them anymore, instead we read everything in, sort over it just once without the need for 'just in case' temp's, and then output whatever we were asked for only when we are sure we have the correct answer. Almost all key data aims to be constant past the point of its initialisation so side effect creep and trouble with half (re)initialised data should be significantly reduced in future. In almost every case it is easy and clean to simply delay initialisation until all required input channels have been emptied. If you like, think of it as mostly being one big constructor, with a little destructor at the end which outputs what you requested. At core, it is simply a generated config file -- with some user friendly logic for extracting its data and finding related files. Removed references to --gl-libs in --help. It still exists, but if its deprecated, no need to fill space in a compact help summary. It will remain documented (as deprecated) in the man page. Removed references to arcane order rules for arguments. Those limitations don't exist anymore, though the options are backward compatible in all other respects from the user pov. Removed references to --inplace, it doesn't need to be in the summary help either. It also is still accepted as an option, but there is no value in passing it, an uninstalled wx-config will automatically behave correctly. When you need --inplace, it will supply that behaviour for you (but there is no harm in typing it your self in that case). If you do type it when you don't need it, bad things will probably happen just like they always would have. Along with items above, generally compressed --help text to fit on even a traditional sized terminal without the need for paging. If we want more detailed help built in, it should be broken into separate pages, and this would be a trivial extension. Command line input is now controlled by a small generic parser. You define what options you want and what groups you want them in by initialising them as lists. It runs over all the input and fills corresponding psuedo-hashes from it for you to use as you please later. Added a validator for it to check yes/no options. Use posix extended regex instead of gnu 'basic' regex extensions, grep -E is portable, if gmake is not a requirement, we surely can't push gnu grep on people. Made --list more user friendly. It will now always list the current wx-config if it matches the feature spec, though it will warn if that config is not in the specified --prefix. Alternate configs that match (if any) are listed separately. An unqualified call to wx-config --list will always return (at least) the config that was called. We can never have a 'hanging' wx-config shell with no real implementation to back it up anymore so we can always return a sensible result for the user. A wx-config anywhere can list (and hence use) the configs installed in any (other) prefix. Delegation. Too big a topic to remark on in depth here, see the code for a fuller description. With everything being nicely constant and aligned to the respective library build, then aside from delegation, wx-config really is _just_ a config file (albeit with a layer of logic around the constants), and each wx-config carries a set of defaults which match perfectly the library build that it was generated with. If you choose a set of features that it can match, it will answer all your queries for them, if it cannot, it will seek to delegate to the config that is most like itself, but which can supply all the features you specified. This should be completely compatible with any set of options that returned a sensible result previously, and produce a sensible result in many cases where previously the collating order of your locale or the nuances of your filesystem operations would decide which library it thought you wanted. Sort duplicates out of the list of libraries and trickle shared dependencies down the list to properly support static builds. Added the inplace-config tweak for use in the build tree. This works like any other config, except it presets the default prefix to point at the build dir instead of the configured prefix that will become the default if this build is installed. It provides the behaviour of --inplace when $build_dir/wx-config is called without also specifying a different --{exec-,}prefix or any feature flags that it is incompatible with. In that event, it will try to delegate as per the normal rules. The inplace wrapper is not installed with the primary config which cleanly disables it for system installs. It will be invalidated if the build (or source) dir is moved, but will be revalidated if the build tree is subseqently updated with ./config.status --recheck && config.status (which it probably would need to be to build anyway for other reasons at present too) Enabled full support for static builds again, promoted --static to a full feature option. Fixed --ld to return something for them too. Added --flavour, similar to the existing --vendor, but for autoconf builds. These will probably want to be streamlined further. Broadened the use of release and flavour labels to support better concurrent installs. Fix bit rot in make-dist due to new/deleted files. Whittled down the number of obsolete and duplicated substitution variables in configure.in, and lowercased some variables we no longer export for substitution. Use the autoconf macros to generate files where we want them instead of making them someplace and then moving them all about. Remove extra files and symlinks added for the two part wx-config version. Removed the debian -contrib packages. We'll use multi-lib support to manage them from now on and indiviual libs can be split out along functional lines if required. This means the retained contribs will now get __WXDEBUG__ versions packaged too. Removed conflicts from almost packages except i18n and wxPython. All packages now either update or install alongside any existing ones. Added support for flavoured debs as well. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@29241 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
2004-09-21 13:16:29 -04:00
$(RESCOMP) -i$< -o$@ --define __WX$(TOOLKIT)__ $(__WXUNIV_DEFINE_p_2) --include-dir $(srcdir) $(__DLLFLAG_p_2) --include-dir $(srcdir)/../../samples --include-dir $(top_srcdir)/include
# Include dependency info, if present:
@IF_GNU_MAKE@-include .deps/*.d
.PHONY: all install uninstall clean distclean xrcdemo_bundle data