Thank you David.
> The procedure was: on Linux development machine, unzip the gtk Windows bundle
> in a directory
> with the C source, set up a Makefile with the appropriate CFLAGS and LDFLAGS,
> 'make mingw'
> and deploy the EXE. This procedure suited my development style.
> That is the
On 10/23/2018 02:16 AM, John Mills wrote:
> I have been developing a C-language GTK+ 2.0 application for MS Windows 10
> using mingw
> cross-compilation on Linux, and deploying it by installing the Windows GTK+
> 2.0 runtime
> bundle on the Windows machine.
>
Hello
Thank you for your explanations Dov and Emmanuele.
My program is fairly simple - it samples colour from an image and builds a
greyscale matrix,
which is viewed on a GtkImage with a GtkEventBox for rubberbanding/cropping and
a
GtkPrintOperation for hard copy output.
It's a custom
Hi;
On Tue, 23 Oct 2018 at 08:26, John Mills wrote:
> Hello list
>
> If this question should be raised on another list, please let me know.
>
> I have been developing a C-language GTK+ 2.0 application for MS Windows 10
> using mingw
> cross-compilation on Linux, and deploying it by installing
John,
I am maintaining several gtk2 applications for windows that I'm cross
compiling from Linux. I'm using Fedora for the cross compilation and the
way I'm working is as follows:
- Install the necessary mingw64 packages through dnf
- Install mingw32-nsis for the generation of a windows