zint-barcode-generator/INSTALL
Robin Stuart ba7915c356 Make the docs fit into 80 columns
Patch 5 of 7 from "Ismael Luceno" <ismael.luceno@gmail.com>
2010-09-14 11:29:45 +01:00

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**********************************************************************
* PLEASE NOTE: This is just a simple guide to getting Zint working. *
* More complete documentation is available from the project website: *
* >>> http://www.zint.org.uk <<< *
**********************************************************************
The easiest way to configure compilation is to take advantage of the CMake
utilities. You will need to install CMake first. If no Qt libraries are
installed then CMake will not attempt to build the Zint Barcode Studio
GUI. Similarly if libpng is not detected then CMake will not attempt to
compile PNG image support. This method is recommened in most cases, the
notable exception being MinGW.
Once CMake is installed follow these steps:
cd build
cmake ..
make
make install
The command line program can be accessed by typing:
zint {options} -d {data}
Notice that the data needs to be entered after all other options. Any options
given after the data will be ignored. The GUI can be accessed by typing:
zint-qt
The MakeFile Method:
MakeFiles are provided for some systems although this method is now
deprecated. It compiles and installs the library and CLI only. If you have
installed Zint using this method before please note that the binaries will
now install to a different location than version 2.3.0 or earlier (/usr/bin
rather than /usr/local/bin and /usr/lib rather than /usr/local/lib). This
makes installation easier on Red Hat based systems (RHEL, CentOS, Fedora
etc.) and on BSD-like systems (FreeBSD, OpenBSD etc.) and is more correctly
in line with the LSB.
*** UNINSTALL ANY PREVIOUS VERSION OF ZINT BEFORE USING THIS METHOD ***
To compile using this method simply run:
make
make install
If compiling on MinGW substitute the Makefile.mingw files for the default
Makefiles in both the /frontend and /backend folders.
MS Windows:
Compiling on Cygwin and MinGW are covered above. Compiling with MS Visual
Studio is more involved! Full instructions are currently not ready for
publication but will be placed on the project website as soon as possible.
Mac OSX:
Efforts are currently under way to ease compiling on OSX using the CMake
method. It may be possible to compile Zint using methods similar to those
given above, but this has not been thoroughly tested yet. If you have any
success with compiling Zint on OSX then please get in touch. An install
binary for OSX is also in development.