Is it possible to use the zephir language on a windows system when the packages json-c and re2c are required.
Can I somehow install or build the packages in windows to then build and run zephir?
PHP runs in windows. There are sources and binaries of json-c and re2c, and zephir itself is documented to compile under Visual C. I see no reason for it to not run on windows.
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How can I check if vcpkg installed debug/release version of a library?
I'm on macOS Monterey but I guess this applies to other OS also.
I did vcpkg install qt5 and after a few hours it looks like it installed everything (almost).
After adding the kit from vcpkg on QtCreator, I can build/run a simple Qt based project in release mode but in debug mode it fails with:
vcpkg install both versions. Qt IDE integration however works only for release builds unless you are allowed to specify a qt.conf file to use for customized lookup. Typically IDE integrations just look for qmake without any way to customize it... which only allows one build config to work in vcpkg
How to install the package on windows? I have seen a lot of Ubuntu guides but don't know how to install for windows
You need libc6 header files from this library to include with your c++ programs that is not OS specific.
I have installed Qt with Homebrew. Everything is working fine for Desktop Application Development. But I do not find Maintenance Tool. Do I need to install that separately with brew ?
It does not exist, since homebrew tries to be a package manager like they exist on linux environtments. Just like cygwin/msys2 for windows. So they provide one qt build and that's it.
You can still install the official binary distribution from Qt which contains the Maintenance Tool. You can think of the Maintenance Tool as Qt's internal package manager, that can install official Qt binaries.
I want to install OpenAL Haskell bindings for Windows. When I try cabal install alut I get:
Resolving dependencies...
Configuring OpenAL-1.4.0.2...
cabal: The package has a './configure' script. This requires a Unix
compatibility toolchain such as MinGW+MSYS or Cygwin.
Installing MSYS or Cygwin is absolutely not an option. runghc setup configure on the source yields the same thing. This leads me to the following:
How can I install OpenAL with just an installation of the Haskell Platform? I know mingw comes with the Haskell Platform on Windows. Can I use just that to execute this script?
Is there a package that can play audio that installs with cabal on Windows 7 AND Unix based systems?
The source contains hundreds of directives designed for the configure script, which doesn't work on Windows. Is there a version of the source which is platform specific, ie, the script has already been run in a windows environment?
Edit: Context for the problem:
I have a Haskell program, which among other things, plays sound. It is going to be used for demonstration/interactive presentation to students. The computers in the lab run Windows 7. They have the Haskell Platform installed, but not MSYS or Cygwin. I have about 45 minutes to complete this, which doesn't leave time for the installation of needlessly complex and essentially pointless software. If I could get Windows-compatible source code, I could just distribute it with the program I wrote. All the packages I need besides this one will cabal install just fine; this is also a good introduction to package management.
Edit2: cabal install fails with Cygwin installed, as does runghc setup configure
I have a Qt application that I can compile in Ubuntu 10.04 64-bit and on Windows. However, I would like to avoid switching to Windows every time I want to compile the Windows version.
Is there a way I can compile a Windows Qt executable in Ubuntu with mingw32 or something?
Further, is there a way to integrate that compiler into Qt Creator?
There is a PPA (Personal Package Archive) for some people who are cross-compiling Qt and related software on Ubuntu for Windows. The PPA contains both the cross-compilers and the dependencies you will need to cross-compile Qt programs. If you look at the source packages there, I think you will be able to figure out how to configure your projects and build them.
If you most of your time spend coding with Qt on Linux (for example, Ubuntu), you may produce some experiment: install Wine, install Qt SDK for Windows with Wine and tried to build some simple project!
And if you don't like crazy things, which I wrote above, just use VirtualBox.