Difference between revisions of "Compiling Inkscape on Windows 32-bit"
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=== Inkscape under Windows === | === Inkscape under Windows === | ||
Ishmal provides a complete set of compiler and libraries on his website. You can get all packages from http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/. | Ishmal provides a complete set of compiler and libraries on his website. You can get all packages from http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/. You better check there the last version, but as of November 30th 2007 those are: | ||
* the mingw compiler version 4.2 http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/mingw-4.2. | * the mingw compiler version 4.2 http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/mingw-4.2.1-071022-dw2.7z | ||
* the gtk libraries version 2.10 http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/gtk210- | * the gtk libraries version 2.10 http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/gtk210-071023-dw2.7z | ||
* other libraries | |||
http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/devlibs-2.12-071115.7z | |||
The configuration files expect the packages in specific directories: | The configuration files expect the packages in specific directories: | ||
* the compiler C:\MinGW | * the compiler C:\MinGW | ||
* the libraries C:\gtk210 | * the libraries C:\gtk210 | ||
* other libraries C:\devlibs | |||
Now you step into the Inkscape source directory: | Now you step into the Inkscape source directory: |
Revision as of 18:09, 30 November 2007
See the Win32 Build ticket for some info.
Inkscape under Windows
Ishmal provides a complete set of compiler and libraries on his website. You can get all packages from http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/. You better check there the last version, but as of November 30th 2007 those are:
- the mingw compiler version 4.2 http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/mingw-4.2.1-071022-dw2.7z
- the gtk libraries version 2.10 http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/gtk210-071023-dw2.7z
- other libraries
http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/devlibs-2.12-071115.7z The configuration files expect the packages in specific directories:
- the compiler C:\MinGW
- the libraries C:\gtk210
- other libraries C:\devlibs
Now you step into the Inkscape source directory:
...\> cd ...\inkscape
set up the environment variables
...\> mingwenv.bat
build the magic make replacement:
...\> g++ buildtool.cpp -o btool
or, if you get errors about gettimeofday:
...\> g++ -DNEED_GETTIMEOFDAY buildtool.cpp -o btool
start the build proccess:
...\> btool
Now you should have you fresh Inkscape in the ...\Inkscape\Inkscape directory.
We will update this page soon with information on how to build Inkscape on the Win32 platform. In the meantime, there are some fairly complete notes on how to build the current package with either Mingw on Windows, or a cross-compiler on Linux, at
http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32_inkscape_org/win32buildnotes.html
(note: http://inkscape.modevia.com/win32libs/ may have more complete and up-to-date library packages).
There is also a Win32 installer
Create the Setup package for Win32
To create the setup package you need the NSIS installer on your PC. Get that from http://nsis.sf.net . You have successfully built Inkscape and everything is in the ...\Inkscape\Inkscape\ directory. Open the ...\Inkscape\packaging\win32\inkscape.nsi using the NSIS program and compile the package. Sooo easy :-)
A Note from Jon about UNICODE on Win32
Actually, Microsoft themselves never use _UNICODE, nor it's 'evil' friends TCHAR and _T. If it is used, it results in a binary that can not be run on Windows 95/98/ME. It is more of a "Windows NT only" define.
Microsoft applications like MS Office have been pure 16-bit Unicode internally for years now. Also remember that BSTRs in Win32 are required to have 16-bit Unicode data. So for any COM access on a Win32 box running Win9x/ME 'multibyte' or '8-bit' COM calls convert all ANSI data to Unicode once you pass things in. To avoid this, Microsoft just keeps data 16-bit Unicode and then translates to local ANSI codepage only when data needs to be passed directly to a Win32 call.
To help developers, Microsoft finally made public their API they had been using. It's "The Microsoft Layer for Unicode".
Although that simplifies things, it's not required. I've done Win32 programs that are 16-bit Unicode and run on Windows 95/98/ME with no problems years before they released that.
Soo.... _UNICODE can't be used as it makes your binary unusable on Win9x/ME. Then it turns out that TCHAR and _T can't be used either. (Oh, and MS can't really use them, since Office does run on Win9x/ME). So just explicitly use some 16-bit datatype for chars. Microsoft is misleading in their documentation when they state that wchar_t is 16-bit. Most other platforms (including Mac OS, Linux, Solaris, BSD, etc) follow the language standard's recommendation and make it 32-bit. So it is best to avoid wchar_t for any real cross-platform code.
So, some general guidelines are:
- Never define _UNICODE
- Don't use _T
- Don't use TCHAR
- Don't use wchar_t
- Use some explicit 16-bit type for characters/strings
- IBM's ICU does this
So then it's a simple matter of converting data from the standard UTF-8 GTK+ data to UTF-16 data before passing to Win32-land.
The result? A single binary that executes properly on both Win9X/ME and WinNT/2K/XP, including full and proper font and filename support.
And, as I've mentioned before, I've actually achieved this for a few different shipping products and projects.
-- [[[JonCruz]] Jon C]
SVN and Windows
If you want to access Inkscapes' subversion repository on SourceForge from Windows, I'd heartily recommend TortoiseSVN. It has the SSH stuff built into it so you don't have to mess about with putty, and it integrates right into Explorer, so SVN becomes just an extension of the right-click file commands. get it from http://tortoisesvn.net/
John