I'm a few days researching and still not get anything that really helped me, I need to get the installer program by inno, my only problem is that I need to configure it so that at installation time he install the printer PDF Creator, I'm not getting do this part, I need while installing, install the printer pDF creator also need to change his name over that part I know more or less how it's done. If anyone can help me I thank you from the heart.
You need to either create a inno setup file (.iss) yourself or download "PDFCreator.iss" from the "setup" folder of source code version 1.3.2
Compile the inno setup file of your customized PDFCreator version using inno setup software.
Related
I want to install a software on my PC but when i clicked to install it I got
CVIRTE.dll Missing error
I search for this error but unable to download this dll file. Please provide any link to download this file
Any help would be highly appreciated
I guess this is the CVI Runtime Engine. It is needed to run Applications that were made with LabWindows/CVI or MeasurementStudio by National Instruments ( http://www.ni.com/lwcvi/ ). Usually, programmers of such applications also generate a Windows Installer Package for the application, which also does the installation of the CVI Runtime Engine. So , once you installed a CVI application like that, you usually can run other CVI application just by copying them (as long as they do not need additional packages from Ni). So, either run an installer of another application made with CVI, or just install the RTE.
Be aware that there are new versions of the RTE with every new version of CVI, and the library is getting larger and larger. So maybe you can go for an older version of the RTE, it could be more compact.
The 2015 version of the RTE can be downloaded here :
http://www.ni.com/download/labwindowscvi-run-time-engine-2015/5374/en/
Good luck !
This might seem like a basic question, but let me explain.
I'm currently trying to get CouchDB running on Windows. Usually (from what I can tell watching several YT tutorials) you just go to couchdb.apache.org/download and download the windowsx64 version. Then open it and a install wizard should appear.
However when I download the file I get a file named "fd15d91c1e214c3451bef296564086f6a9266e848d57eaa8ac596e3765939578" which isn't openable and doesn't give me a wizard.
Is the current CouchDB installation corrupted? Am I doing something wrong?
I just tried http://couchdb.apache.org/, chose the Download link from the top navigation bar, then Windows(x64) for version 2.1.0. This kicked-off downloading the file apache-couchdb-2.1.0.msi.
Definitely try another browser or restart your machine.
I want to build a GUI for some fortran code I have. GTK-Fortran seemed like a simple option, but I'm having trouble getting everything installed in the correct place.
I am using Windows 8. I have gfortran (version 4.8.1), Cmake, and GTK+ 3 installed. As far as I can tell, the last thing I need to do is include GTK-Fortran, which I download from https://github.com/jerryd/gtk-fortran (the link to download the .zip file is on the right side of the page), but all of the instructions on what to do with it are incredibly vague to me. The INSTALL instructions seem to want me to make a new directory, C:\build, and then do something with cmake, but I'm not sure what that something is or how to do it.
I have GTK+ 3 in C:\GTK, and its bin is included in the path. I would like to just put the GTK-Fortran files within the GTK folder, but I don't think that will actually give me access to the GTK-Fortran files.
Could someone give me very clear instructions on what to do with the files for GTK-Fortran so that I can call them from my own fortran code?
The simplest way for using gtk-fortran under Windows is to install MSYS2/MINGW64, following the installation steps described in the wiki of the project:
https://github.com/vmagnin/gtk-fortran/wiki#windows
I'm trying to just build webkit on windows. As usual I started with webkit site and trying to get developer tools setup. I'm struck basically at the cygwin Installation itself.
The cygwin-downloader gets all the packages and runs the setup normally.
As per the installation instructions, I selected the Install from Local Directory Option (cygwin install and source package directories are different).
There was some initial turbulance in finding the packages, somehow i could let it find the packages. The screen looks like this now.
I selected the packages (all) and then proceeded with next. It just ran very fast and exited saying nothing needs to be installed. It looked like this.
After I ran the cygwin shorcut from the desktop its shouting something is missing.
I don't understand what am I missing here. Also at some link it says we need a port to build webkit. If thats the case, how does anyone port webkit to their applications without building the webkit alone?
I know this is not a programming question. but this will help most of the people who are taking baby steps in understanding and build WebKit. Thanks!
According to this, it's seems a cygwin-downloader's bug.
However, there is a workaround...
Just copy {cygwin-downloader}\setup.ini file to a {cygwin-downloader}\x86\ directory. Then reopen setup.exe. It will show you a package list without turbulence. You don't need to click all from the package list. Just click Next.
edit: The real solution to this is now that OpenCV supports python 3. I'm leaving the details below for anyone who happens to be stuck with an old setup.
I'm trying to get OpenCV working with Python 3. A friend showed me ctypes-opencv that appears to work with Python 3. The problem is I totally can not figure out how to "install" or get any code working. I've followed all instructions I could find from a few people mentioning installs on google and none of those seemed to work or I couldn't even get through the basics that they mentioned.
I am just hacking around with the version of IDLE that came with Python 3. No IDE.
Start with OpenCV:
The only windows installer for OpenCV 2.1 is a visual studio installer. I assume that means that it installs files that make it easier to use in Visual Studio. However, does it also mean that I can't use that installer with Python 3? I tried the vs installer together with ctypes-opencv as below, and I got errors that the dlls were not in my path (but my path variable did include the OpenCV bin folder with dlls). Is this the wrong direction?
The apparent alternative is to build OpenCV myself. I tried following the directions here and all I get is "project files may be invalid" from the CMake gui application when pressing the "Configure" button. Same when following these hints from Stack Overflow. I'm suspicious that this is also the wrong direction since I am not currently using any of the tools that are listed in the CMake configure. Is this also the wrong direction?
Next ctypes-opencv:
I installed this and the installer recognizes Python3.1 and puts itself into the site-packages folder. If I try to run demos, it tells me the dlls are not in the path although they are, as mentioned above.
Summary:
I think I generally understand each piece here (code, compile, dll, imports, ...) but I do not know how all the pieces fit together and where I am going wrong. Can someone please tell me what steps or understanding I am missing here?
I get the feeling that I need to be reading a book or two to fill in the holes in my understanding of how all these pieces fit together. I wouldn't even know what area of books to get though so any suggestions there would be appreciated as well.
Python's ctypes is a wrapper around the opencv dll files, as long as you can point to the compiled libraries it doesn't matter what the source code is set up to be edited in. For windows I would simply run the installer, then try to load the dll with ctypes. If you can get that far, any other errors can be fixed by looking at the ctypes wrapper file and editing the load section to look like your test file.
Christoph Gohlke maintains Windows binaries for many Python packages, including the production version of OpenCV 3.0 with Python 3.x bindings, released 4 June 2015:
http://www.lfd.uci.edu/~gohlke/pythonlibs/#opencv
To install, just download the 64-bit or 32-bit .whl file appropriate for your system, then run pip install [filename]. Then the instruction import cv2 should work in your Python 3.x interpreter.
Yakiimo san, OpenCV 2.1 DLL can be loaded with ctypes. I have tested it.
p.s. I have set the C;\OpenCV2.1\bin in Env Path.