9a83f86094
Standardize on using a single macro across all wxWidgets sources and solve the name clash with Sun CC standard headers (see #10660). git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@61508 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775 |
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autopackage | ||
minimal.bkl | ||
minimal.cpp | ||
README |
A simple autopackaged wxWidgets application ============================================================================== This directory contains the minimal wxWidgets sample program, a bakefile, and an Autopackage spec file; this file shows you how to use them to create the release of a wxWidgets-based application for Linux. For more info about Autopackage refer to: http://autopackage.org A generic quick-start guide for non-wxWidgets based applications is at: http://autopackage.org/developer-quickstart.html Assuming you already have downloaded wxGTK port of wxWidgets, compiled it and installed it, you need to install Autopackage and bakefile. Search http://autopackage.org and http://bakefile.sourceforge.net for the download page and grab the latest release. Once you've got your development environment ready, just do from your shell: bakefile -f gnu minimal.bkl # to create the GNUmakefile for our app makeinstaller # to create the Autopackage for our app Yes: it's so easy. Now try to run "package install wxminimal-1.0-1.x86.package' and admire your brand-new distro-neutral installer for Linux.