How can I create a new AVD emulator for Mac OS.
I don't have Android Studio installed - would prefer not to.
Docs talk about a program avdmanager -but I don't have it.
I think that gets installed with a certain Android sdk tools version - but I'm not getting the option to upgrade in my sdkmanager
+1 on comment of Liberbon
just change the x86 to x86_64 if you are using 64 bit OS.
In my case this solved my issue, I am using Mac OS v10.14.6
Install the dependencies for Android development.
Make sure that these initial steps are done before you create AVD emulator.
# Install Java 8 and Android SDK
brew tap caskroom/versions
brew cask install adoptopenjdk/openjdk/adoptopenjdk8
brew cask install android-sdk
# Set environment variables
echo "export JAVA_HOME=$(/usr/libexec/java_home -v 1.8)" >> ~/.bash_profile
echo "export ANDROID_HOME=/usr/local/share/android-sdk" >> ~/.bash_profile
source ~/.bash_profile
# Install all Android SDK packages
$ANDROID_HOME/tools/bin/sdkmanager "tools" "emulator" "platform-tools" "platforms;android-28" "build-tools;28.0.3" "extras;android;m2repository" "extras;google;m2repository"
Create Android Virtual Device via command line.
# Load image if it's missing (optional)
$ANDROID_HOME/tools/bin/sdkmanager "system-images;android-28;google_apis;x86_64"
# Create android emulator with avdmanager
$ANDROID_HOME/tools/bin/avdmanager create avd -n Emulator-Api28-Google -k "system-images;android-28;google_apis;x86_64"
References:
https://docs.nativescript.org/start/ns-setup-os-x
https://docs.nativescript.org/tooling/android-virtual-devices#creating-android-virtual-device-via-command-line-tool
UPD:
2020-05-21: Changed brew cask install java8 to brew cask install adoptopenjdk/openjdk/adoptopenjdk8.
2020-05-21: Changed x86 to x86_64. Thanks #Bon Tobiel Blancia for advice.
I have Lenovo Ideapad310 laptop with Ubuntu OS. But for iOS development I want to install Xcode in my machine, so how can i install Xcode in my machine?
please anyone help me??
First: You can't install Xcode on Ubuntu it's restricted only for Mac OS.
Second: I assume you want Swift, which you can install it over terminal using this command
sudo apt-get install clang
If you installed the Swift toolchain on Linux to a directory other than the system root, you will need to run the following command, using the actual path of your Swift installation:
export PATH=/path/to/Swift/usr/bin:"${PATH}"
You can verify that you are running the expected version of Swift by entering the swift command and passing the --version flag:
swift --version
for IDE you might use Visual Studio Code and install Swift plugin.
Good Luck
I am trying to install the ruboto gem on my MBP retina. I have previously installed the SDK and NDK on my computer using Homebrew as the install service and have them pathed as such. However, here is my problem.
When trying to use 'ruboto setup', the system keeps informing me that is cannot find
"Platform SDK android-19". I have added the path to the platform/android-19 folder in the .bash_profile, however it refuses to see it as such. Any hints as to how I might correct this or work around this?
"ruboto setup" expects the platform sdks to be installed in a directory parallel to the "android" command:
<android-sdk>/tools/android
<android-sdk>/platforms/android-19
You need to ensure that your Android SDK installation follows this structure or file an issue in the Ruboto tracker ( https://github.com/ruboto/ruboto/issues ) and ask for "ruboto setup" to support Android SDK installation using HomeBrew.
An alternative is to uninstall your Android SDK and let "ruboto setup" install it from scratch.
The most recent version of ScraperWiki depends on Poppler (or so the GitHub says). Unfortunately, it only specifies how to get it on macOS and Linux, not Windows.
A quick googling turned up nothing too promising. Does anyone know how to get Poppler on Windows for ScraperWiki?
Other answers have linked to the correct download page for Windows users but do not specify how to install them for the uninitiated.
Go to this page and download the binary of your choice. In this example we will download and use poppler-0.68.0_x86.
Extract the archive file poppler-0.68.0_x86.7z into C:\Program Files. Thus, the directory structure should look something like this:
C:
└ Program Files
└ poppler-0.68.0_x86
└ bin
└ include
└ lib
└ share
Add C:\Program Files\poppler-0.68.0_x86\bin to your system PATH by doing the following: Click on the Windows start button, search for Edit the system environment variables, click on Environment Variables..., under System variables, look for and double-click on PATH, click on New, then add C:\Users\Program Files\poppler-0.68.0_x86\bin, click OK.
If you are using a terminal to execute poppler (e.g. running pdf2image in command line), you may need to reopen your terminal for poppler to work.
Done!
Poppler Windows binaries are available from ftp://ftp.gnome.org/Public/GNOME/binaries/win32/dependencies/ -- but note that those aren't quite up-to-date.
If you're looking for Python (2.7) bindings (as this question's tag suggests), I requested them in the past via this bug report. A couple of people apparently managed to produce something, but I haven't checked those out yet.
As for a more recent (python bindings unrelated) poppler Windows binaries Google result, see http://blog.alivate.com.au/poppler-windows/
Finally, there's the brand-new (and currently very frequently updated) PyGObject all-in-one installer (mainly aiming to provide PyGObject-instrospected Gtk+3 Python bindings etc. for Windows), so if that's what you're looking for, go to http://sourceforge.net/projects/pygobjectwin32/files/?source=navbar
Download Poppler Packaged for Windows
https://github.com/oschwartz10612/poppler-windows/releases
I threw together a quick repo with the latest Poppler prebuilt-binaries packaged with dependencies for Windows. Built with the help of conda-forge and poppler-feedstock. Includes the latest poppler-data.
With anaconda installed on windows one can simply execute:
conda install -c conda-forge poppler
UPDATE 2
See the answer by Owen Schwartz.
UPDATE 1
Rumpel Stielzchen's comment:
This site is no longer maintained. Poppler version 0.68 is very
outdated today. You find the latest version compiled also for Windows
here: https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/poppler/files Sadly there is no
32 bit version, only 64 bit
… but this package contains no dependencies:
It seems that the Anaconda people have a tool to download a package
and all dependencies. And there is a file in the TAR package:
index.json which lists the package on which it depends. I downloaded
the dependencies one by one, and yes: It WAS a pain.
Original answer
Latest Poppler Windows binaries can be found here:
http://blog.alivate.com.au/poppler-windows/
Chocolatey
Poppler is available as Chocolatey package:
choco install poppler
By default Poppler is installed in C:\ProgramData\chocolatey\lib\poppler and shims are automatically created for the following tools: pdfdetach, pdffonts, pdfimages, pdfinfo, pdfseparate, pdftocairo, pdftohtml, pdftoppm, pdftops, pdftotext, pdfunite.
To update Poppler, run:
cup poppler
Scoop
Install from the main bucket:
scoop install poppler
By default Poppler is installed in ~\scoop\apps\poppler and shims are automatically created for the following tools: pdfdetach, pdffonts, pdfimages, pdfinfo, pdfseparate, pdftocairo, pdftohtml, pdftoppm, pdftops, pdftotext, pdfunite.
To update Poppler, run:
scoop update poppler
TeX Live
As mentioned in another answer, MiKTeX currently ships with Poppler tools, and so does another LaTeX distribution, TeX Live.
From the guide:
Command-line tools.
A number of Windows ports of common Unix command-line programs are installed along with the usual TeX Live binaries. These include gzip, zip, unzip, and the utilities from the poppler suite (pdfinfo, pdffonts, …)
Poppler suite is located by default in C:\texlive\<year>\bin\win32 and, if you can compile your LaTeX documents, should work out of the box since this location is added to the PATH by the installer.
To Simply install Poppler on Windows run through the below mentioned steps without touching the environmental varible.
Download the Latest Poppler Binary from the URL: http://blog.alivate.com.au/poppler-windows/index.html
Unzip it and copy the poppler-0.68.0_x86 folder in some path for ex, C:/User/Poppler/poppler-0.68.0_x86/poppler-0.68.0/bin
Now go to your Python code where you want to call Poppler for image conversion and use the below mentioned code snippet:
from pdf2image import convert_from_path
pages = convert_from_path('MyPdf.pdf', 500, poppler_path = r'C:\User\Poppler\poppler-0.68.0_x86\poppler-0.68.0\bin')
for page in pages:
page.save('out.jpg', 'JPEG')
You should consider using Windows Subsystem for Linux (WSL).
Enable WSL on Windows 10 (it will not work on S edition)
Install Ubuntu (latest version) on WSL from the Windows Store
Open Ubuntu command-line
In the Ubuntu Command-line, run the following commands:
sudo apt-get update
sudo apt-get upgrade
sudo apt install poppler-utils
pdftocairo -v - to check the installed version
You can then run pdftocairo (for example) in two ways:
Within the Ubuntu command-line: pdftocairo ...
Directly from Windows command-line: wsl pdftocairo...
NOTE: There is a default version of poppler for each release of Ubuntu. You will need to look up the instructions (there should be plenty on the internet), for how to install the latest version of poppler-utils on Ubuntu. This might involve quite a few steps, which will compile from the source code. For example, something like this https://askubuntu.com/a/722955. And then you might get a lot of problems.
The latest version of Ubuntu 19.04, can install Poppler 74. But Ubuntu 18.04 seems to be the latest version you can install for WSL for now, and that installs Poppler 62.
It looks like a version that is build-able with visual studio can be found here https://bitbucket.org/merarischroeder/poppler-for-windows/overview
Up to date binaries for Windows x64, Mac OSX-64, Linux-64bit can be found here
https://anaconda.org/conda-forge/poppler/files
Poppler version 0.84 is available at the link as of this writing which is very current.
The accepted answer and the link given by Alexey are no longer pointing to current versions of poppler
Update :
As of March 8, 2021 the best answer is by Owen Schwarz above https://stackoverflow.com/a/62615998/590388
Another option is that if you have installed MikTeX then poppler is included by default and is probably already in your PATH. In my case the binaries were installed under: C:\Program Files\MiKTeX 2.9\miktex\bin\x64
MSYS2 has the latest version available for install.
If you don't want to install the whole enviroment (or you wanted some kind of portable version) you could also just download Poppler straight from the repository, but then you'd also have to manually handle dependencies. Namely: libwinpthread, nspr, gcc-libs, nss, curl, brotli, openssl, libidn2, libiconv, gettext, libunistring, nghttp2, libpsl, libjpeg-turbo, lcms2, openjpeg2, libpng, zlib, libtiff, xz and zstd.
Install the Microsoft Visual C++ Build Tools
Install poppler through the Conda prompt conda:
conda install -c conda-forge poppler
please note: if you don't have anaconda installed, it can be downloaded from here,
https://docs.anaconda.com/anaconda/install/windows/
Installing Poppler on Windows
Go to https://github.com/oschwartz10612/poppler-windows/releases/
Under Release 21.11.0-0 Latest v21.11.0-0
Go to Assets 3 Download
Release-21.11.0-0.zip
Adding Poppler to path
Add Poppler installed to loaction : C:\Users\UserName\Downloads\Release-21.11.0-0.zip
Add C:\Users\UserName\Downloads\Release-21.11.0-0.zip to system variable path in Environment Variable
This is what I did.
Install msys2
Open msys2 shell and then run:
To List available packages named poppler
pacman -Ss poppler
To Install the package
pacman -S mingw-w64-ucrt-x86_64-poppler
Open MSYS2 UCRT64 Shell and access poppler binaries
The binaries are installed at:
C:\msys64\ucrt64\bin
I want to remove the installed Qt 4.8 libraries and install Qt 4.6 libraries on my mac.
But when I try to install them I get:
"Qt libraries cannot be installed on this disk. A newer version of
this software already exists on this disk"
I removed the /usr/local/Qt4.8.x folder from the disk but the message is still here.
How can I remove the old libraries?
You shouldn't manually delete a folder unless there is no other option. You should try running the uninstall script first:
sudo python /Developer/Tools/uninstall-qt.py
The path to this script will be different if you are running the latest Xcode app bundle and not the default Snow Leopard/Lion Xcode.
I installed qt via homebrew. To remove I simply wrote the following in the terminal: brew uninstall qt#4