Thanks Tiago
I assumed for some reason that those paths would be taken care of by
--with-boost
However after building numpy and then attempting to build scipy and finding
it needs BLAS which is written in fortran I have stopped trying to get
graph-tool to work. There are far too many dependencies for it to be a
reasonable product for my use case. I'll revert to boost-graph directly in
c++ for my needs.
Many thanks for your help in trying to get this to work.
Thanks
Gerry
On Tuesday, January 7, 2014 2:39:39 PM UTC, Tiago Peixoto wrote:
>
> On 01/07/2014 03:29 PM, Gerry Steele wrote:
> > Thanks I failed to spot that.
> >
> > I intend to completely ignore that install of boost, so I'm not sure why
> it is finding it there.
> >
> > I've run configure with:
> >
> > ./configure --prefix=/home/gs/graph-tool-2.2.27/gt-rbsinst
> --with-boost=/home/gs/c/lib/boost.1.53.0-sopy-ucs4/
> LDFLAGS=-L/home/gs/Python-2.7.6/python-2.7.6-shared-ucs4/lib
> >
> > Why then is the graph-tool configure finding it and not the one under
> the --with-boost= parameter
>
> The configure script finds the include paths, but the compiler/linker
> still need to known where the binaries are. This is done via the
> LDFLAGS. You only passed the path to the python library, but you need to
> pass the path to the boost libraries as well.
>
> Best,
> Tiago
>
> --
> Tiago de Paula Peixoto <[email protected] <javascript:>>
>
>
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