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README.win32
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README.win32
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The Pango backends written for Win32 is pangowin32. Pangowin32 uses
the Win32 GDI font API. GTK+ 2.8 and later on Win32 however actually
uses the pangocairo backend (which then uses only small parts of
pangowin32). Much of the GDI font API calls are in cairo.
The pangoft2 backend was originally written with Win32 in mind, but
its main use nowadays is on other platforms than Win32.
There are three ways to build Pango for Win32:
1) Use gcc (mingw), libtool, make, like on Unix.
If building from git, run the autogen.sh script that runs aclocal,
automake, autoconf and configure to build makefiles etc. This is what
[email protected] uses. Pass the same switches to autogen.sh that you
would pass to the configure script.
If building from a tarball, just running the configure script and then
make should be enough. But, as always, you need to understand what is
happening and follow the progress in case manual intervention is
needed.
tml ran the configure script like this when building binaries for
Pango 1.10.0:
PATH=/devel/dist/glib-2.8.0/bin:$PATH ACLOCAL_FLAGS="-I /devel/dist/glib-2.8.0/share/aclocal" PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/devel/dist/glib-2.8.0/lib/pkgconfig:$PKG_CONFIG_PATH CC='gcc -mtune=pentium3' CPPFLAGS='-I/opt/gnu/include' LDFLAGS='-L/opt/gnu/lib' CFLAGS=-O ./configure --disable-gtk-doc --without-x --prefix=c:/devel/target/pango-1.10.0
2) Use Visual Studio 2008. Use the solution file in
build/win32/vs9. See the README.txt there for more information.
3) Use MSVC and nmake. Use the makefile.msc makefiles. These makefiles
are supported by Hans Breuer. They requires manual editing. You need
to have the source code to some suitable version of glib in a sibling
directory. Ask Hans for advice.