Installing wxWindows 2.0 ------------------------ Unarchiving ----------- If there is a setup program, run the setup program that comes with the Windows version. Do not install into a path that contains spaces. The installation program should set the WXWIN environment variable, which will be activated when your machine is rebooted. If there is no setup program, it will come as a series of .zip files: wx200gen.zip Generic source code and samples (required) wx200msw.zip Windows-specific source code and samples (required) wx200doc.zip Documentation source code (not required) wx200hlp.zip WinHelp documentation wx200pdf.zip Acrobat PDF documentation wx200htm.zip HTML documentation wx200vc.zip MS VC++ 5.0 project files Unarchive the required files plus any optional documentation files into a suitable directory such as c:\wx. Alter your WXWIN environment variable to point to this directory. Compilation ----------- At present, wxWindows compiles with VC++ 4.0/5.0/6.0, BC++ 4.5/5.0, Gnu-Win32 b19/b20, and Mingw32. It may compile with 16-bit compilers (BC++ and VC++ 1.5) but this hasn't been tested lately. Visual C++ 4.0/5.0/6.0 compilation ---------------------------------- Using project files: 1. Unarchive wx200vc.zip, the VC++ 5 project makefiles. 2. Open src/wxvc.dsp, set Debug or Release configuration, and compile. This will produce lib/wxvc.lib or lib/wxvc_debug.lib. 3. Open a sample project file, choose a configuration, and compile. The project files don't use precompiled headers, to save space, but you can switch PCH compiling on for greater speed. Using makefiles: 1. Change directory to wx\src\msw. Type 'nmake -f makefile.nt' to make the wxWindows core library. 2. Change directory to wx\samples and type 'nmake -f makefile.nt' to make all the samples. You can also make them individually. Visual C++ 1.5 compilation -------------------------- 1. Change directory to wx\src\msw. Type 'nmake -f makefile.dos' to make the wxWindows core library. 2. Change directory to wx\samples and type 'nmake -f makefile.dos' to make all the samples. You can also make them individually. NOTE: only a few samples have up-to-date makefiles, e.g. minimal, docview, mdi. The utils makefile does not yet work. Borland C++ 4.5/5.0 compilation ------------------------------- 1. Change directory to wx\src\msw. Type 'make -f makefile.b32' to make the wxWindows core library. 2. Change directory to wx\samples and type 'make -f makefile.b32' to make all the samples. You can also make them individually. NOTE: only a few samples have up-to-date makefiles, e.g. minimal, docview, mdi. The utils makefile does not yet work. Gnu-Win32 b19/b20/Mingw32 compilation ------------------------------------- wxWindows 2.0 supports Gnu-Win32/Cygwin b19, b20, Mingw32, and Mingw32/EGCS. Thanks are due to Keith Garry Boyce (garp@opustel.com) and Cygnus for making it all possible. From wxWindows 2.0 beta 9, both Gnu-Win32 and Mingw32 (the minimal distribution of Gnu-Win32) can be used with the same makefiles. Here are the steps required: - Retrieve and install the latest beta of Gnu-Win32, or Mingw32, as per the instructions with either of these packages. - If using Mingw32 (including the EGCS variant), you need some extra files to use the wxWindows makefiles. You can find these files in ports/mingw32 on the ftp site or CD-ROM, as extra.zip. These should be extracted to the Mingw32 directory. IMPORTANT: also see mingw32.txt in this directory (docs/msw) about a fix that has to be applied to a Mingw32 header file. - Modify the file wx/src/cygnus.bat (or mingw32.bat or mingegcs.bat) to set up appropriate variables, if necessary mounting drives. Run it before compiling. - For Gnu-Win32, make sure there's a \tmp directory on your Windows drive or bison will crash. - Edit wx/src/makeg95.env and search for MINGW32. Take note of the comments for adjusting settings to suit Gnu-Win32 or Mingw32. Basically, this is just a case of adding the __MINGW32__ symbol to OPTIONS for Mingw32, or removing it for Cygnus Gnu-Win32. For Mingw32/EGCS, add both __MINGW32__ and __EGCS__. - Mingw32 may not support winsock.h, so comment out socket-related files in src/msw/makefile.g95. - Use the makefile.g95 files for compiling wxWindows and samples, e.g.: > cd c:\wx\src\msw > make -f makefile.g95 > cd c:\wx\samples\minimal > make -f makefile.g95 - Use the 'strip' command to reduce executable size. - With Cygnus Gnu-Win32, you can invoke gdb --nw myfile.exe to debug an executable. If there are memory leaks, they will be flagged when the program quits. - If using GnuWin32 b18, you will need to copy windres.exe from e.g. the Mingw32 distribution, to a directory in your path. All targets have 'clean' targets to allow removal of object files and other intermediate compiler files. Gotchas: - libwx.a is 48 MB or more - but much less if compiled with no debug info (-g0) and level 4 optimization (-O4). - install.exe doesn't have built-in decompression because lzexpand.lib isn't available with Gnu-Win32. However, you can use it with external decompression utilities. - Doesn't compile src/msw/ole files, so no drag and drop. References: - The GNU-WIN32 site is at http://www.cygnus.com/gnu-win32/ - Mingw32 is available at: http://agnes.dida.physik.uni-essen.de/~janjaap/mingw32/index.html - See also http://web.ukonline.co.uk/julian.smart/wxwin/gnuwin32.htm Notes ----- - Debugging: under Windows 95, debugging output isn't output in the same way that it is under NT or Windows 3.1. Set wxUSE_DBWIN32 to 1 if you wish to enable code to output debugging info to an external debug monitor, such as Andrew Tucker's DBWIN32. You can download DBWIN32 from: http://ftp.digital.com/pub/micro/NT/WinSite/programr/dbwin32.zip and it's also on the wxWindows CD-ROM under Packages.