On Wed, 8 Jun 2016 16:15:40 -0400
Geoffrey Hutchison wrote:
> The problem, of course, was that compiled C++ is hard to distribute
> in a cross-platform way.
GNU Octave can download and compile its C++ packages automatically.
Perhaps it can serve as an example?
Regards
Jure
> GNU Octave can download and compile its C++ packages automatically.
> Perhaps it can serve as an example?
My concern is this requires a C++ compiler from the end-user. On Mac and
Windows in particular, that’s not very common.
Moreover, while we've offered nice C++ APIs for Avo1, I think the
On Thu, Jun 9, 2016 at 1:57 PM, Geoffrey Hutchison
wrote:
>> I wonder if we might either use the GitHub APIs
>
> We can definitely use the GitHub API via HTTP. The catch is this ties us to
> GitHub a bit more, while using Git directly makes it easier to point at
>
> I wonder if we might either use the GitHub APIs
We can definitely use the GitHub API via HTTP. The catch is this ties us to
GitHub a bit more, while using Git directly makes it easier to point at
multiple repositories.
It's pretty easy to walk the JSON from the API, e.g.
Thank you, Marcus. It looks as though it is indeed an SSL issue, and it
appears as though I'm getting close to solving the problem. I got it to
work on my own personal computer - which is good. However, I haven't gotten
it to work on other computers as of yet.
I compiled OpenSSL, and I recompiled
On Thu, Jun 9, 2016 at 1:25 PM, Geoffrey Hutchison
wrote:
>> GNU Octave can download and compile its C++ packages automatically.
>> Perhaps it can serve as an example?
>
> My concern is this requires a C++ compiler from the end-user. On Mac and
> Windows in particular,