Can I write OCaml in VisualStudio - visual-studio-2010

I find a plug-in called Visual ML
http://caml.inria.fr/cgi-bin/hump.en.cgi?contrib=62
but I can't find the download link
Is there other plug-ins I can use?

Related

how to create .exe from CEF source code on windows (without using Visual studio)

i have downloaded CEF binaries from the link http://opensource.spotify.com/cefbuilds/index.html as successfully created a .sln file using VS 2017.
But now our requirement is to compile the cef binaries on windows through MinGW or through command line(Do not want to use Microsoft visual studio).
can someone helpme out with this thing?
Only Visual Studio is officially supported to build CEF on Windows. You'll unlikely be successful to make a different compiler work in a reasonable time.
There is also ways to compile a VS project via the command line. Example: msbuild project.sln /Flags... For more details have a look at this stackoverflow link
If you ever want to compile libcef (Chromium) for Windows, the whole build is entirely command-line only despite using the Visual Studio compiler.
There is a free edition of Visual Studio called Visual Studio Community (used to be Visual Studio Express):
https://www.visualstudio.com/vs/community/
Also, if you are a small company, you might want to check out Microsoft's Action Pack for 400 EUR/year which includes 3 Visual Studio Prof. subscriptions.
Have a look at the CEF wiki:
https://bitbucket.org/chromiumembedded/cef/wiki/MasterBuildQuickStart.md
I do not have enough points to comment on Eugen. Maybe someone can edit.
I think Eugen is right, and VS is a must. I suggest flowing also this link to learn how to build CEF programmatically and on different OS.

FSUIPC SDK installation

I have FSUIPC (with Prepar3D) and I want to create a program to get the Prepar3D's information through FSUIPC.
To do this, I want use Microsoft Visual C++ 2010 (or Visual Studio 2013) and the FSUIPC SDK.
The problem is that I don't usually use Microsoft Visual C++ and I don't know how to integrate the SDK.
I have .h .c .lib and .rc files but I don't really know what to do with...
Can anyone help me please?
Ben

How to configure Glib on Microsoft Visual Studio 2010?

i'm trying to port to Windows a C project wrote to work on Linux. It's a simple project that depends CUDA and Glib librarys.
I believe the best way is to compile with Microsoft Visual Studio 2010, but i don't have idea how to link Glib to this project. CUDA code is going well, but every call to Glib methods generate a "unresolved external symbol" error.
i just solved my problem using this guide to configure GTK on Visual Studio 2008:
http://www.etechplanet.com/blog/visual-studio-2008-configuration-for-gtk2b-gui-development.aspx
The only change i done was about the Tools/Options/VC++ Directories because this was deprecated on VS2010. I added the paths directly to the project properties.

Possible to use Qt Open Source integrated in Visual Studio?

I'm currently having issues installing Qt (Open Source Edition) such that I can use it in integrated into Visual Studio 2010. I realize that the 2008 edition will have deployment issues, and so I installed it from the source, only to be missing qtmaind.lib.
Anyways, I was looking around for a solution to this, and I came upon this: http://doc.qt.io/qt-4.8/install-win.html, which states:
Open Source Versions of Qt is not officially supported for use with
any version of Visual Studio. Integration with Visual Studio is
available as part of the Qt Commercial Edition.
Anyways, I thought maybe this was the reason I was having problems, and so I wanted to ask the following question:
Is it possible to integrate Open Source Qt into Visual Studio?
Absolutely. I use Qt 4.7 integrated with Visual Studio 2005.
I configured Qt this way:
configure -debug-and-release -opensource -shared -ltcg
-no-accessibility -no-qt3support
Once Qt was built (via nmake), I also installed the Qt Visual Studio Add-in.

Building a library with Visual Studio that can be linked to a Qt project?

Right now I have some libraries that link easily to Visual Studio projects but I can't figure out how to link them with Qt. My idea is to write a VS project that wraps the functionality I need from the libraries, then compile that to a library which can be linked to Qt. From my understanding, VS and Qt use compilers that create incompatibile libraries. My questions are:
Can I modify VS or Qt in a way that I can compile a library in VS which can be linked to Qt?
Is there a simpler solution to this problem?
The specific library I'm using is Nitro-Nitf. For my Qt project I'm using Qt Creator and for Visual Studio I'm using VS 2008.
Yes, the Windows binaries provided by Qt are built using MinGW. If you build Qt from source using Visual Studio, then your libraries will be compatible.
Although I haven't tried it, Qt Creator 1.2 introduces support for MS compilers, so you should be able to continue to develop your Qt projects in Creator.
Qt is available as source code, you can build it with whatever toolchain you like. Visual Studio is an IDE (integrated development environment) that normally invokes the microsoft compiler (cl) and linker (ld), although you can configure a Visual Studio project file to do a makefile build, or IIRC, invoke any other program you like to do the build step (at my previous job, we built our Qt apps with cl and ld, and could debug with Visual Studio just fine, since about 2005).
Also, it appears this "NITRO" project is open source, so you can download the source instead of a pre-built binary, and build it using MinGW if you'd like to build Qt apps with MinGW, or if you are using pre-built Qt libraries that were built with MinGW.
To build Qt4.5 with visual studio
Download the source
./configure.exe -platform win32-msvc2008 or win32-msvc2010
nmake
There is even a free release of the visual studio plugin to make handling all the autogenerated code automatic in visual studio

Resources