Alec Flett wrote:
Heikki Toivonen wrote:
2) Put everything in the end user release, and drop developer release.
+1
3) Make developer and end user releases identical (except for the fact
that one has debug binaries and one optimized).
+1, (but option 2 still being my preference) and also include a warning
on the download page that says "Don't use the developer/debug binaries
for anything but wx development"
Actually, I have a question: what's the point of the debug symbols in
the binary if you don't have the sources to do anything significant? I
mean if you have to download the wx sources from our tree anyway, along
with the debug binary, who are we really helping? We're helping the
very small set of people who need to debug, but not compile, wx. I'm
guessing there are exactly 0 people out there interested in this.
One feature I've used quite successfully in the past is remote
debugging. I attach to a customer running a debug version using Visual
Studio on Windows, or when I was at NeXT using gdb.
Alec
4) Something else. Please describe.
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