3f66f6a5b3
This keyword is not expanded by Git which means it's not replaced with the correct revision value in the releases made using git-based scripts and it's confusing to have lines with unexpanded "$Id$" in the released files. As expanding them with Git is not that simple (it could be done with git archive and export-subst attribute) and there are not many benefits in having them in the first place, just remove all these lines. If nothing else, this will make an eventual transition to Git simpler. Closes #14487. git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@74602 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.