On 6/10/22 18:51, Milan Nikolic wrote: > I saw the same thing when I was testing my IUP bindings. It works on the > latest Fedora but Ubuntu 22.04 looks like your issue. > I believe that is because the Wayland display server is the default now, > you can try to start the Xorg server instead, to confirm that is the issue. > > I only did a test in VM, so I thought it is maybe because of graphics in > the virtual machine and Wayland session. > > Milan > > On Fri, Jun 10, 2022 at 8:33 AM <supp...@scriptbasic.org> wrote: > >> Antonio, >> >> I created a Ubuntu 22.04 system and was trying to get my ScriptBasic >> interface working with the latest IUP release. My example online >> dictionary using ScriptBasic and IUP now has alignment issues. What >> changed to cause this? >> [...] >> >> John
G'day John, ---- [This message is being cross-posted to the lua-l list, since it partially begs for more resources for IM/CD/IUP maintenance; Antonio Scuri is a very valuable, but very scarce resource, and more resources are needed. My apologies if this cross-posting is improper, and would ask that replies be targeted and focussed to the proper list or lists, as appropriate.] ---- The last release of IUP was 3.30, on 2020-08-02. Scratching through the Subversion releases, this looks to be r5892. Looking at the SourceForge IUP Code tab, the latest revision of the trunk is r5942, made on 2022-03-03. I believe that a majority, but certainly not all, of the 50 changesets made since the 3.30 release are bug fixes. *** Opinion: IM/CD/IUP releases, especially bugfix ones, are not given the priority they deserve. The last IUP release was made after a significant number of new features were added to the package. I strongly believe that: - IM 3.15, 2020-07-31 =~ r816, currently r820; - CD 5.14, 2020-07-31 =~ r894, currently r900; and - IUP 3.30, 2020-08-02 =~ r5892, currently r5942; have long-standing bugfixes to the modules, that deserve to be wrapped up into a new set of releases. ---- My SourceForge project [lglicua-alpha6](<https://sourceforge.net/projects/lglicua/files/) was written explicitly because of my frustration at the release/repository gap; it uses the repository by default. Although I've never tested Ubuntu 22.04 before (-alpha6 was released in 2022/02/xx), I have run up a virtual machine, and can confirm that lglicua-alpha6 Works Like A Bought One. ---- To address John's initial IUP query directly: [PREAMBLE: You might like to do all of the following in a virtual machine, as a number of items are system-installed, instead of being project-local.] 1. I recommend updating your system's packages, if possible: - $ sudo apt-get update - $ sudo apt-get upgrade 2. Create some PROJECT directory, and unpack the latest lglicua release tarball <https://sourceforge.net/projects/lglicua/files/lglicua-0.1-alpha6.tar.gz/download> into that directory. 3. PROJECT/install$ is for installing Lua, LuaRocks, selected Rocks and IM/CD/IUP sources [with FTGL and pdflib7 being pseudo-projects split out of the CD project.]: PROJECT$ cd install PROJECT/install$ ./i # get a one-page help summary PROJECT/install$ ./i lua-install 5.4 PROJECT/install$ ./i reboot-now (After rebooting, which sets up the LuaRocks paths:) $ cd PROJECT/install $PROJECT/install$ ./i imcdiup-osdepend-install $PROJECT/install$ ./i imcdiup-svn-fetch 4. Build from Subversion sources, into a "../1/" play workspace: PROJECT/install$ cd ../build PROJECT/build$ ./q # get a one-page help summary PROJECT/build$ ./q nuke,unpack,build,gather fer-real 5. Trivial (two-line) "hello, world", indented here for clarity: PROJECT/build$ cd ../1/play PROJECT/1/play$ cat hello-world #!/bin/bash ../support/play-lua-tec iup=require("iuplua"); iup.Message("MyApp", "hello, world") PROJECT/1/play$ ./hello-world 6. Try bringing in your application into the "play" area, and see if there are any changes. Reports on both regressions and improvements would be welcomed. *** Beware: The "../1" workspace, including many files, is a temporary area only; each time that you find something of value, I strongly urge you to copy it to a safe place outside of the PROJECT tree. There is a simple-minded command, "./q iup:patch fer-real", which means that you could create a patch (svn diff) and optionally apply it as during testing; similarly, you could write a simple script to populate "../1/play/" with project files, after each "./q nuke,unpack,patch,build,gather fer-real". 7. You can use "PROJECT/build$ ./q svn-update fer-real" to track changes to any of the IM/CD/IUP repsitories. ---- Sorry for the long message; I hope that this is useful. cheers, sur-behoffski (Brenton Hoff) programmer, Grouse Software _______________________________________________ Iup-users mailing list Iup-users@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/iup-users