I use Ubuntu 10.4, and I installed GNUStep, Gorm (a gui builder) and ProjectCenter (the GNU alternative to Xcode) because I want to develop Objective-C apps. I opened the ProjectCenter and I created an application that displays only an empty window. I sourced the GNUstep.sh and I compiled the app.
I ran it, but there is only the menu bar. No window.
The terminal which I used to run the app showed the following message:
Thank you for any help.
Hey guys!
To avoid :wall: for another 5 hours, I'm posting here to hopefully resolve this silly issue once and for all. I'd appreciate if you could simply provide the full makefile I should use, and then explain what does what. I've been studying dissected examples for hours now and none of it's... (3 Replies)
I hope this is the right place to post this and that I can get some help. I pretty much suck at troubleshooting build issues.
we are running oracle red-hat linux 2.6.32-200.20.1.el5uek #1 SMP Fri Oct 7 02:29:42 EDT 2011 x86_64 x86_64 x86_64 GNU/Linux
trying to build the latest stable version of... (3 Replies)
Hello,
I am writing to ask for support about compiling an very old but famous C-progam for genetics study called MapMaker/QTL, and the source code is available from MIT:
http://www.broadinstitute.org/ftp/distribution/software/mapmaker3/The program was originally designed for systems like SunOS... (1 Reply)
I am trying to compile some code and getting lot of errors
g++ -traditional -Wno-non-template-friend -Wno-deprecated -O3 -DNDEBUG -DREAL=float -DGetREAL=Getfloat -IbaseLib -Itommy -Iothers ./source/main/RayTrac.cc -o raytrac
./source/main/RayTrac.cc:36:20: error: gendef.h: No such file or... (1 Reply)
if somebody can help me pls.
i need the source code for a shell which compiles C or java programs in unix
i need a very short and simple one, just the compiling part
Respect (2 Replies)
here is the very simple bob.c:
main()
{
printf("hello");
}
i use tiger and i use the command:
gcc bob.c
and the end result:
bob.c: In function ‘main':
bob.c:3: warning: incompatible implicit declaration of built-in function /‘printf'
any help appreciated, i'm just starting... (4 Replies)
Help
I know nothing about c programming. :confused:
I want to compile the below c program. It extracts data from an oracle database into csv files.
I have oracle 9206 installed with ProC. I dont have gcc
My question is. How the hell do I make this into an file I can run? I am pulling... (3 Replies)
Hello. I am trying to run a c program on a unix shell (ssh). I have searched this forum but have not come accross the soultion to my problem, so I am posting my question here :cool:
I wrote the following simple code:
#include <iostream.h>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
... (7 Replies)
Hi All,
I tried to compile a C program but i am getting error while Linking . it says Undefined reference to ' ' (here it gives a method name which is defined Globally ).
Can any body tell the resaon and remedy for the same . Iam stuck up here .
Thanks (3 Replies)
RENAISSANCE(7) Miscellaneous Information Manual RENAISSANCE(7)NAME
renaissance - GNUstep Development Framework
SYNOPSIS
renaissance
DESCRIPTION
This manual page documents briefly the renaissance development framework. This manual page was written for the Debian distribution (based
on the program's README file) because the original program does not have a manual page.
renaissance is a GNUstep develoment framework which runs on top of the GNUstep libraries. It also works on top of the Apple Mac OS X Cocoa
libraries, providing an opaque layer to write portable applications.
GNUstep Renaissance allows you to describe your user interface in simple and intuitive XML files, using an open, standard format describing
the logic of the interface. At run-time, GNUstep Renaissance will then generate the user interfaces (using the native host OpenStep-like
libraries) by reading the XML files. The connections between the objects created from the XML files, and the other objects in the applica-
tion are done via outlets (as traditionally in OpenStep); a new quick and intuitive syntax has been developed to make creating outlets as
easy as possible.
GNUstep Renaissance contains quite a few new ideas over previous technologies. Some of the main end-user advantages of GNUstep Renaissance
over previous OpenStep-inspired technologies for the same task are:
- Portability. User interfaces built using GNUstep Renaissance are
truly portable. They simply run without any change on any
OpenStep-based platform on which Renaissance has been ported
(currently, at least on both GNUstep and Apple Mac OS X).
- Open, simple and standard format. User interfaces built using
GNUstep Renaissance are saved into open, simple files which can be
edited and read on any platform using any text editor. The XML
format has been designed to be as easy to edit as possible. We will
have a specific graphical builder for GNUstep Renaissance, which will
make editing directly the XML files a rare operation; still, it's a
great advantage to be able to actually edit and inspect them directly
whenever needed. Your user interfaces will no longer be locked in
binary files which can only be edited using a specific
platform-specific application; you will be able to compare different
versions of the same user interface using diff and cvs diff (you
can't get any meaningful comparison with binary formats); and your
user interfaces will be finally stored in a readable format, which
you can read even from a terminal, making your program easier to
check. The format is so nice that I expect many hard hackers will
keep creating user interfaces directly in XML even when a graphical
editor is available!
- Easy localization. User interfaces built using GNUstep Renaissance
are much easier to translate than in all previous technologies. You
no longer need to create a new separate interface for the new
language: you can just provide the translation of the strings in a
.strings file, and GNUstep Renaissance will automatically replace
every string in the existing interface with the corresponding
translation. Previous technologies can't do this because they don't
support automatic sizing and layout of widgets.
- Themeability. Themes are a problem for traditional OpenStep-like
technologies, because a change in theme changes all the widgets
appearances and sizes. User interfaces built using GNUstep
Renaissance can survive easily a change in theme, since all sizing
and layout of widgets is done dynamically at runtime. Previous
technologies can't, and you would need to create a different user
interface for each different theme.
Renaissance is composed of the following blocks:
- AutoLayout: a collection of autolayout objects (h/v boxes, grids,
spaces, ...), providing automated runtime widget layout, similar to
what you find in most other toolkits on the market ... similar, but
better :-) The missing piece of the AppKit. Depends on gnustep-gui.
- Markup: an xml parsing/generating engine. Depends on gnustep-base.
- TagLibrary: a standard set of tag objects for use by the xml
parsing/generating engine in order to read/write gui windows, menus,
panels, etc. Depends on the previous parts: AutoLayout and Markup.
Renaissance was written by Nicola Pero <n.pero@mi.flashnet.it> and is part of the GNUstep project (http://www.gnustep.org).
GNUstep Renaissance home page is at http://www.gnustep.it/Renaissance.
AUTHOR
This manual page was written by Brent A. Fulgham <bfulgham@debian.org>, for the Debian project (but may be used by others).
GNUstep February 6, 2004 RENAISSANCE(7)