This commit was manufactured by cvs2svn to create tag 'M_STABLE'.

git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/tags/M_STABLE@40387 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
This commit is contained in:
Bryan Petty
2006-07-30 23:36:38 +00:00
parent 6a06841c34
commit 9aea121b6c
4223 changed files with 1680500 additions and 3876 deletions

69
wxPython/BUILD.osx.txt Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,69 @@
Building wxPython on Mac OS X
-----------------------------
NOTE: OS X support is HIGHLY EXPERIMENTAL at this time. Most things
don't work correctly (or at all) yet.
These are the steps I have used for building wxPython on Mac OS X 10.1
with the Apple Developer Tools, a.k.a the Darwin version. I assume
that you know your way around a command line and that you know how to
get things from various CVS repositories as needed.
1. As of this writing the CVS version of Python (2.2b1+) is required.
You can get it via anonymous CVS from the Python project at
Sourceforge. Build Python.app and install it as described in the
Mac/OSX/README file in the Python distribution.
2. You may want to make a symlink or two in /usr/local/bin so that
this version of Python can be found from the command line. For
example:
cd /usr/local/bin
sudo ln -s /Library/Frameworks/Python.framework/Versions/2.2/bin/python2.2.exe python2.2
sudo ln -s python2.2 python
3. In a wxWindows CVS tree make a build directory.
cd ~/proj/wxWindows # or wherever you put it
mkdir build
4. Run configure from that build directory.
cd build
../configure --with-mac --with-opengl --enable-debug
5. Make and install wxMac.
make
sudo make install
6. Build wxPython for testing (without installing it.)
cd ../wxPython
python setup.py IN_CVS_TREE=1 build_ext --inplace --debug
7. Test. The easiest way to do this from the CVS tree (witout having
to reinstall after every build) is to make a symlink in the demo
directory to the wxPython package dir, and then run stuff directly
from the demo.
cd demo
ln -s ../wxPython .
8. Now just navigate in the Finder to the demo directory and double
click demo.py, or simple.py, or whatever you want to run.
(Unfortunately it can't be done from the commandline in a terminal
window. You can open the Console app to see any tracebacks or
other output.)
9. Figure out what's wrong, figure out how to fix it, and then send
the patches to me. <wink>
--Robin