I''ve just subscribed to this list and now see another went through a similar process about the same time. I made a page on the wxRuby wiki with some notes about the eventual success but I am not satisfied so will be working on a better process. http://wxruby.rubyforge.org/wiki/wiki.pl?Building_WxRuby_2.0.1 That page is not meant to be a formal how-to but more so information on some of the pitfalls that occured to help others get wxRuby working. I certainly appreciate the efforts by all who have worked on this project. Have you looked at the support code for this ? I look and see not man hours of work but years. I started off wanting the latest stable ruby (1.9.3) working on my x86_64 Ubuntu 11.10 distribution with the latest wxWidgets (2.9.3). There were some set backs. The wxRuby archive is 2009, set up for wxWidgets 2.6-8.x and ruby 1.9 was freshly supported. Linux kernel was 2.4.x. So, there have been changes since then :) I thought, ok this is great to get my code skills back in shape and I was really tired of recompile cycles so wanted to use ruby to be my main logic engine for my next projects. I''m not a complete newb but haven''t coded in Linux for around two years so am very rusty. I want current systems so started by with a fresh isntall of Ubuntu 11.10 Desktop x86_64. I installed the wxWidget package - saw it was only 2.8.11 so uninstalled and dl''ed wx 2.9.3, compiled and exverything looked good aside the response time for wxAUI. I then recompiled Ubuntu to enable 1000 Hz; much smoother desktop response now. I went through a lengthy process of getting 1.9.3 to work with my IDE development tools. I wanted the latest and greatest but it took effort of compiling and getting ruby-debug to work with my IDE (used NetBeans in the past but the latest does not support ruby so went with RubyMine). I eventually worked out .rvm and the various paths. So I now have a working ruby 1.9.3 p21, in a nice IDE with debug support. I then started with wxRuby, which didn''t work. I spent about a week gettig wxRuby to work. I was scouring the internet for clues and leanred a lot about what has happened in the past few years of ruby, linux and wx development. The end result is what I put in the wiki notes. It came down to not having time to make an initial demo of a working ruby wx development system. I wound up using Ubuntu''s wxWidgets 2.8.11 package which had all the libraries separated, including the the contributed ones (which is contrayry to the build notes on the wiki about haveing a monolithic wx build - as I understood it at the time). I located SWIG 1.3.38 and it seemed fine. I had to edit some rake build files due to the more modern gcc being stricter and treating warnings as errors. As my skill comes back, I will probably remember what I should really do with that issue. Part of the trouble is string handling which is changed in wx 2.9.3 anyway so there will be a lot of focus in that area eventually. In the end I now have an initial dev environment I can sneak out demo code while working on what i really want which is a fully modern ruby/wx dev environment. This means at least ruby 1.9.3 and wx 2.9.3 working together on a 64 bit linux machine with modern kernel glibc 3 etc. That is the short story. The long story involved a lot of back tracking, compiling various things, dealing with incompatible ruby-debug support gems. One example is, "Why not just use the x86_64 gem from the repository ?" I did but the lib was linked against glibc 2.14 and Ubuntu is 2.13 Future Ubuntu 12.x is still using 2.14, btw. I''m going to make a post in the development list about wanting to help modernize the work. wx will be changing quite a bit, ruby already has with ruby 2.0 in the development head. We need to update the project. TK
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Am 09.02.2012 19:53, schrieb tk at tkinnovations.net:> I''m going to make a post in the development list about wanting to > help modernize the work. wx will be changing quite a bit, ruby > already has with ruby 2.0 in the development head. We need to > update the project.That?s interesting. I?m currently looking into writing C++ extensions for Ruby and was thinking about rewriting a new wxWidgets binding from scratch and just got up and running with the (very, very) basic things... wxRuby is great, yes, but the development has stalled over the last months/years and I fully agree with you that something must be done about it. I?ve been a long-time wxRuby user but as I more and more tend to look at Rubinius and it?s concurrent threads and their C API compatibility, I?d like to use wxRuby from there. The most annoying thing I?ve experienced with wxRuby is its inability to deal with threading and I doubt it is easily possible to make the old codebase conforming to that schema, especially regarding the true concurrency Rubinius provides. So I came to the conclusion to just try writing a new wxWidgets binding, also cleaning up the API wxRuby provides. Even if it may not prove useful in any way, it will be some kind of learning experience; and if not even that, it might just have been a fun project.> I started off wanting the latest stable ruby (1.9.3) working on myx86_64 Ubuntu 11.10 distribution with the latest wxWidgets (2.9.3). There were some set backs. If you want to be on the cutting edge, why do you use Ubuntu then? Canonical is known to not always provide the newest technologies, instead they focus on stability. You should look into a rolling-release Linux distribution like Arch Linux or Gentoo. Aside from just being more recent, they also have the benefit of not having all the packages split up into microparts the Debian world seems to like so much. I?m interested in how you proceed with your wxRuby upgrade. Maybe I will look on it as well, but for now SWIG scares me a bit too much; I don?t like code generated for me.> TKVale, Marvin PS: I think I?m going to subscribe to the wxRuby development ML as well. Just to see what?s going on there. -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJPNEbzAAoJELh1XLHFkqha5rQH/iaX1AQErzLf9jAMY2H4hOHr Nkvo5GwtPeMhtaR3CfK1dyBwzUocRjDGrmI23mySid/IX6OT3vmX9YKQEVvNV+xK ON3cJ0lDSxB7Y3r8+wrF/5nIesduSK6gU1WzlpgsfWU8qV9yOxMfgiK0mXB4h44Z 4Mz6FIxsajHQBSGOCkiSfJjhXFwANR1CxLEjdSQMyeb5xXv6d3d0nGSbQPLjmyty R56T8H6uGK/xYLtzAZ/Lh5LMAWZsfRXM4y9z0sfHPNvv+0yuUD4AUkESBdbqrBRT ngNexD+gevQdoANE7aYbVHQTlYQF7bNoQZN79e4fSQ/iCltFRJUsM1Fv6DIF+ss=nvEF -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
tk at tkinnovations.net
2012-Feb-09 23:37 UTC
[wxruby-users] getting wxRuby to work on Ubuntu 11.10
Ubuntu is the compromise of stability and yet edgier than Debian. My projects have end users with skill sets more attuned with the Ubuntu distribution. I spent a weak learning FFI in a project where I made a system monitor for my Logitech G15 LCD display. I''m close to saying screw it and just go GTK which is a C lib FFI can help support whereas wxWidgets is C++...nothing is ever easy :) I think wxWidgets is worth the extra effort. The projects I''ve done in the past with wxWidgets were C++ a bit of a pain to debug (app logic not so much wx) but the pay off was supporting three OS''s out of the box that had the native look and feel which was a big sell. I can make an interface C lib to wx and use FFI buuuuut really wx is a huge lib and the wxRuby project has already crossed that hurdle. I will probably dig out the property grid control code for 2.8.x and see how to add just that to wxRuby as a learning experience. Hopefully after that I will have a enough feel of wxRuby to plan an upgrade. As a side note, it looks from reading the dev portion of the wiki, my thoughts are in line with what the devs were planning but then it is like they fell from the face of the planet. I sincerely hope they are doing well. Hard to know in this day and age of remote content. I had a game guild mate vanish and someone found out a year later he had died. Another went to war and died there. Nothing but an email so who knew but was strange. TK Quoting Quintus <sutniuq at gmx.net>:> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Am 09.02.2012 19:53, schrieb tk at tkinnovations.net: >> I''m going to make a post in the development list about wanting to >> help modernize the work. wx will be changing quite a bit, ruby >> already has with ruby 2.0 in the development head. We need to >> update the project. > > That?s interesting. I?m currently looking into writing C++ extensions > for Ruby and was thinking about rewriting a new wxWidgets binding from > scratch and just got up and running with the (very, very) basic > things... wxRuby is great, yes, but the development has stalled over > the last months/years and I fully agree with you that something must > be done about it. I?ve been a long-time wxRuby user but as I more and > more tend to look at Rubinius and it?s concurrent threads and their C > API compatibility, I?d like to use wxRuby from there. The most > annoying thing I?ve experienced with wxRuby is its inability to deal > with threading and I doubt it is easily possible to make the old > codebase conforming to that schema, especially regarding the true > concurrency Rubinius provides. So I came to the conclusion to just try > writing a new wxWidgets binding, also cleaning up the API wxRuby > provides. Even if it may not prove useful in any way, it will be some > kind of learning experience; and if not even that, it might just have > been a fun project. > >> I started off wanting the latest stable ruby (1.9.3) working on my > x86_64 Ubuntu 11.10 distribution with the latest wxWidgets (2.9.3). > There were some set backs. > > If you want to be on the cutting edge, why do you use Ubuntu then? > Canonical is known to not always provide the newest technologies, > instead they focus on stability. You should look into a > rolling-release Linux distribution like Arch Linux or Gentoo. Aside > from just being more recent, they also have the benefit of not having > all the packages split up into microparts the Debian world seems to > like so much. > > I?m interested in how you proceed with your wxRuby upgrade. Maybe I > will look on it as well, but for now SWIG scares me a bit too much; I > don?t like code generated for me. > >> TK > > Vale, > Marvin > > PS: I think I?m going to subscribe to the wxRuby development ML as > well. Just to see what?s going on there. > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux) > Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ > > iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJPNEbzAAoJELh1XLHFkqha5rQH/iaX1AQErzLf9jAMY2H4hOHr > Nkvo5GwtPeMhtaR3CfK1dyBwzUocRjDGrmI23mySid/IX6OT3vmX9YKQEVvNV+xK > ON3cJ0lDSxB7Y3r8+wrF/5nIesduSK6gU1WzlpgsfWU8qV9yOxMfgiK0mXB4h44Z > 4Mz6FIxsajHQBSGOCkiSfJjhXFwANR1CxLEjdSQMyeb5xXv6d3d0nGSbQPLjmyty > R56T8H6uGK/xYLtzAZ/Lh5LMAWZsfRXM4y9z0sfHPNvv+0yuUD4AUkESBdbqrBRT > ngNexD+gevQdoANE7aYbVHQTlYQF7bNoQZN79e4fSQ/iCltFRJUsM1Fv6DIF+ss> =nvEF > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > _______________________________________________ > wxruby-users mailing list > wxruby-users at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/wxruby-users
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Am 10.02.2012 00:37, schrieb tk at tkinnovations.net:> Ubuntu is the compromise of stability and yet edgier than Debian. > My projects have end users with skill sets more attuned with the > Ubuntu distribution.Ah I see. :-)> I spent a weak learning FFI in a project where I made a system > monitor for my Logitech G15 LCD display. I''m close to saying screw > it and just go GTK which is a C lib FFI can help support whereas > wxWidgets is C++...nothing is ever easy :)While it is not possible to wrap C++ libs with FFI, there?s the rb++ RubyGem that allows to do this AFAIK. However, I never used that one.> I can make an interface C lib to wx and use FFI buuuuut really wx > is a huge lib and the wxRuby project has already crossed that > hurdle. I will probably dig out the property grid control code for > 2.8.x and see how to add just that to wxRuby as a learning > experience. Hopefully after that I will have a enough feel of > wxRuby to plan an upgrade.I wish you good luck. Maybe wxRuby will come to live again.> As a side note, it looks from reading the dev portion of the wiki, > my thoughts are in line with what the devs were planning but then > it is like they fell from the face of the planet. I sincerely hope > they are doing well.I can confirm that they were so half a year ago as I then chatted with some them through this list and IRC (#wxruby on Freenode). Hopefully this hasn?t changed yet!> > TKVale, Marvin -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJPNPH6AAoJELh1XLHFkqhayxkH/2Sr9mQKe/kJTwnQKi75S6nm YFD+/FkZqNR+aMDg7V8G92TVTrQrVY+Veazetom8XWlJp5iFJ8UvmpE4MfZ/Rhss 5OaznBt8UH8bDaU5qCF9bSUfT/IXWS85cnN975BgePSv7RlvbWC7rbgBb+s/gja+ isCigk7nNhfMEVKAQmL07z+BNRvpaHj6zuE1rzSWKhWCVNa68kW65o+Szl4Z3dj6 y/n3u0PB6iSl/kEgNQ4Aqs/klU5WkI1QKzgw278/ExWBBrlrePINsb/yma4E4Dxw OzE/GQgc5EOI2xqwtKiJpfoCVusx/Gev6IUhkfNjs7F89QxroEqDXT/W6ITN1P0=EZR5 -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
> I can make an interface C lib to wx and use FFI buuuuut really wx is ahuge lib> and the wxRuby project has already crossed that hurdle. I will probablydig> out the property grid control code for 2.8.x and see how to add just thatto> wxRuby as a learning experience. Hopefully after that I will have a enough > feel of wxRuby to plan an upgrade.It very likely easier not to start from scratch. There are a lot of helper functions and SWIG macros already in the wxRuby project to solve problems. But it takes time to figure it out, and SWIG is idiosyncratic, especially for ''deeper'' stuff (e.g. memory management). Also the classes left may sometimes be the ''harder'' ones. Have a go, and feel free to ask questions (the wxRuby-dev list is more appropriate and tho no traffic, I think everyone who is likely to know the answer to is subscribed to that).> As a side note, it looks from reading the dev portion of the wiki, mythoughts> are in line with what the devs were planning but then it is like they fellfrom> the face of the planet. I sincerely hope they are doing wellI''m very well, no need to worry - but I''m engaged in things not to do with wxRuby, or programming full stop. It''s probably 18 months since I wrote a line of Ruby. Others have generously taken on keeping this mailing list responsive. I don''t want my absence to be an impediment, so always happy to talk to anyone who wants some large or small role in development and maintenance. alex
I''ll also agree with Alex here about SWIG. My feeling is that time will always be better spent on modifying or adding SWIG interface files, or even submitting patches to SWIG itself if you come up against a totally intractable problem, which you may on the memory side. This will also have the benefit of helping future projects that use SWIG. Any work on your own bindings is just going to be re-implementing what SWIG has already done. For context, I''m not a wx dev, I''m just some guy! I do use SWIG for several of my own native interfaces to ruby and have always had a great experience with it. I think its worth persisting with. If you want to send SWIG questions here, I can share my knowledge. I''m likely to be around because I use wxruby for my personal project. On Sat, Feb 11, 2012 at 12:36 AM, Alex Fenton <alex at pressure.to> wrote:> > > I can make an interface C lib to wx and use FFI buuuuut really wx is a > huge lib > > and the wxRuby project has already crossed that hurdle. I will probably > dig > > out the property grid control code for 2.8.x and see how to add just that > to > > wxRuby as a learning experience. Hopefully after that I will have a > enough > > feel of wxRuby to plan an upgrade. > > It very likely easier not to start from scratch. There are a lot of helper > functions and SWIG macros already in the wxRuby project to solve problems. > But it takes time to figure it out, and SWIG is idiosyncratic, especially > for ''deeper'' stuff (e.g. memory management). Also the classes left may > sometimes be the ''harder'' ones. Have a go, and feel free to ask questions > (the wxRuby-dev list is more appropriate and tho no traffic, I think > everyone who is likely to know the answer to is subscribed to that). > > > As a side note, it looks from reading the dev portion of the wiki, my > thoughts > > are in line with what the devs were planning but then it is like they > fell > from > > the face of the planet. I sincerely hope they are doing well > > I''m very well, no need to worry - but I''m engaged in things not to do with > wxRuby, or programming full stop. It''s probably 18 months since I wrote a > line of Ruby. > > Others have generously taken on keeping this mailing list responsive. I > don''t want my absence to be an impediment, so always happy to talk to > anyone > who wants some large or small role in development and maintenance. > > alex > > _______________________________________________ > wxruby-users mailing list > wxruby-users at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/wxruby-users >-------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://rubyforge.org/pipermail/wxruby-users/attachments/20120211/42841914/attachment.html>
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Am 10.02.2012 22:48, schrieb David Beswick:> I''ll also agree with Alex here about SWIG. My feeling is that time > will always be better spent on modifying or adding SWIG interface > files, or even submitting patches to SWIG itself if you come up > against a totally intractable problem, which you may on the memory > side. This will also have the benefit of helping future projects > that use SWIG. Any work on your own bindings is just going to be > re-implementing what SWIG has already done. > > For context, I''m not a wx dev, I''m just some guy! I do use SWIG for > several of my own native interfaces to ruby and have always had a > great experience with it. I think its worth persisting with. If you > want to send SWIG questions here, I can share my knowledge.I think I will have to look into SWIG then. You?re absolutely right in saying that many problems have already been solved using it and there?s absolutely no need to reiterate everything. Valete, Marvin -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJPNizyAAoJELh1XLHFkqhaYikH/R8GNguW3noenrSFutQeqaQs tZuP+dcjNce1cDuGIcAPsp7TEHp5nqb/lclTHOhOu5I1ZlV5j4fmc+IxyaRQnIZ7 w6u1GQhOcNbdoUC+W6y2Vwv2PhT1xy7YrSlICgZNjQN9VSmKK5xIFNY89E1vGcPT 5+ol78aWCsEzuBkRiLhItxvjRm068zh4M4IyuJRR1JhN/YJNGTnoaPrxhMZXSqJk TqR72EBs0zmnAGbk1xdEY/dWX+inYmPFm3UujdFy/0x40g3VaVc7BgPSqR+y73PO bwZj/QcoludxwsZHPTToSznnwneire2bn3Wshj0QJ7fTxbzSsX4NTKUz6oQLSA4=zetM -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
tk at tkinnovations.net
2012-Feb-11 19:31 UTC
[wxruby-users] getting wxRuby to work on Ubuntu 11.10
I''ve SWIG''d before. I have no intentions, at my current level of understanding, to create the interfaces from scratch. The work is too huge. It is usually easier to hack than create. Preaching to the choir here :) I have begun adding the contributed wx property grid to wxRuby and will share when complete. I''m not sure of the culture here yet for posts so please forgive me. I will probably post something about the modern gcc error about strings in the dev list as I think we need to start thinking about those as eventually to modernize wxRuby we will hit the string changes and it is a current build error on my Ubuntu 11.10 system. I''m on a M$ box at the moment and don''t have all my notes with me. On the culture thing I need to look at the archives and see if my replies are being threaded as I agree with the guy who mentioned that recently. I have the choice to reply to list or sender and wish to be proper. I am currently replying to list. TK Quoting Quintus <sutniuq at gmx.net>:> -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- > Hash: SHA1 > > Am 10.02.2012 22:48, schrieb David Beswick: >> I''ll also agree with Alex here about SWIG. My feeling is that time >> will always be better spent on modifying or adding SWIG interface >> files, or even submitting patches to SWIG itself if you come up >> against a totally intractable problem, which you may on the memory >> side. This will also have the benefit of helping future projects >> that use SWIG. Any work on your own bindings is just going to be >> re-implementing what SWIG has already done. >> >> For context, I''m not a wx dev, I''m just some guy! I do use SWIG for >> several of my own native interfaces to ruby and have always had a >> great experience with it. I think its worth persisting with. If you >> want to send SWIG questions here, I can share my knowledge. > > I think I will have to look into SWIG then. You?re absolutely right in > saying that many problems have already been solved using it and > there?s absolutely no need to reiterate everything. > > Valete, > Marvin > -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- > Version: GnuPG v1.4.11 (GNU/Linux) > Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ > > iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJPNizyAAoJELh1XLHFkqhaYikH/R8GNguW3noenrSFutQeqaQs > tZuP+dcjNce1cDuGIcAPsp7TEHp5nqb/lclTHOhOu5I1ZlV5j4fmc+IxyaRQnIZ7 > w6u1GQhOcNbdoUC+W6y2Vwv2PhT1xy7YrSlICgZNjQN9VSmKK5xIFNY89E1vGcPT > 5+ol78aWCsEzuBkRiLhItxvjRm068zh4M4IyuJRR1JhN/YJNGTnoaPrxhMZXSqJk > TqR72EBs0zmnAGbk1xdEY/dWX+inYmPFm3UujdFy/0x40g3VaVc7BgPSqR+y73PO > bwZj/QcoludxwsZHPTToSznnwneire2bn3Wshj0QJ7fTxbzSsX4NTKUz6oQLSA4> =zetM > -----END PGP SIGNATURE----- > _______________________________________________ > wxruby-users mailing list > wxruby-users at rubyforge.org > http://rubyforge.org/mailman/listinfo/wxruby-users
Hans Mackowiak
2012-Mar-03 14:53 UTC
[wxruby-users] getting wxRuby to work on Ubuntu 11.10
i dont know if the thread owner is still aktive but i have commited my first works for my rwx binding https://github.com/Hanmac/rwx -- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
Kevin McCaughey
2012-Apr-07 23:11 UTC
[wxruby-users] getting wxRuby to work on Ubuntu 11.10
I am coming at this from C/C++ and have fallen in love with Ruby. After much reading of this forum and asking on IRC, I think it would be a real shame to have wxRuby slide into oblivion. I have a lot of time on my hands at the moment (unless my current project takes off quicker than expected). I have never committed anything to Open Source, but I am going to start here if I can. To the guy posting above as guest - if you access this via ruby-forum.com you can set up a username easily and it means we know who the knew committer is! (By persona at any rate - which is helpful) Just how much of this is a SWIG problem and how much is down to wxRuby just not being worked on? Even a ballpark percentage split would be helpful to know from one of the previous developers. If it''s really just a SWIG problem then maybe our time is indeed better spent there for the moment? -- Posted via http://www.ruby-forum.com/.
-----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Am 08.04.2012 01:11, schrieb Kevin McCaughey:> I am coming at this from C/C++ and have fallen in love with Ruby. > After much reading of this forum and asking on IRC, I think it > would be a real shame to have wxRuby slide into oblivion.I agree. So you already had contact with the wxRuby devs in #wxruby on Freenode?> I have a lot of time on my hands at the moment (unless my current > project takes off quicker than expected). I have never committed > anything to Open Source, but I am going to start here if I can.Commiting to OpenSource software is always a good way to develop things.> To the guy posting above as guest - if you access this via > ruby-forum.com you can set up a username easily and it means we > know who the knew committer is! (By persona at any rate - which is > helpful)He uses the mailing list directly and has switched to posting to the wxRuby development ML, which is not listed on ruby-forum.com (see http://wxruby.rubyforge.org/wiki/wiki.pl?MailingLists). However, I?ve not seen any post by him in the last weeks.> Just how much of this is a SWIG problem and how much is down to > wxRuby just not being worked on? Even a ballpark percentage split > would be helpful to know from one of the previous developers. If > it''s really just a SWIG problem then maybe our time is indeed > better spent there for the moment?I?ve looked into wxRuby?s sourcecode a while ago, and if I remember correctly it?s made up of SWIG code to about 85%. I?m not sure about the current SVN trunk, but at least for the latest stable release 2.0.1 you?re limited to SWIG version 1.3.38 and there?s no support for wxWidgets 2.9. Vale, Marvin -----BEGIN PGP SIGNATURE----- Version: GnuPG v2.0.19 (GNU/Linux) Comment: Using GnuPG with Mozilla - http://enigmail.mozdev.org/ iQEcBAEBAgAGBQJPgUUdAAoJELh1XLHFkqha/NYH/3yaCMXWA8f4O7+ln0vdIFRC 4WChevwkmiRaA2yLANmCF8w7wjHU9if66FmEB5q+jBZhbFykWANeG2/91qUDYcQ1 GS90CxkCmxG9cx5g8J2I5bTBUro7JlzDRK4Hf5YlP+B2kLYQfQ1lE/+HWD3+I4kp htjdyvFEPMgGcr8NGOa/LZKJcix2f8zqO1BN+60KCS3PSehyzFrFF/lcO9IYRD6K hwJMaS2wh+ONDz387iAjU04gsOI/r3t6y5RNYAEEsoE4shKazLSckKmL4c8uWLb6 sjOhTEy/TZ7nY0sNo4ssL4oUvloMgWklS5HqhWQuVe6FnDladFzPm6MpacAKsTk=fGjD -----END PGP SIGNATURE-----
Chauk-Mean Proum
2012-Apr-09 07:22 UTC
[wxruby-users] getting wxRuby to work on Ubuntu 11.10
Hi,>Le 8 avril 2012 09:58, Quintus <sutniuq at gmx.net> a ?crit :>I?ve looked into wxRuby?s sourcecode a while ago, and if I remember >correctly it?s made up of SWIG code to about 85%. I?m not sure about >the current SVN trunk, but at least for the latest stable release >2.0.1 you?re limited to SWIG version 1.3.38 and there?s no support for >wxWidgets 2.9.SWIG-2.0.x support has been added in SVN (in the branches/wxruby_2_0_stable). It''s not yet delivered as a release but you can get the sources from SVN. Like me, Alex, the lead developer, has been away from the project for a long while. Cheers, Chauk-Mean -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://rubyforge.org/pipermail/wxruby-users/attachments/20120409/4d68c3ab/attachment-0001.html>
tk at tkinnovations.net
2012-Apr-10 15:42 UTC
[wxruby-users] getting wxRuby to work on Ubuntu 11.10
Sorry missed this as Spam Assassin snatched it due to the relay and lack of rDNS.> Content preview: -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Am 08.04.2012 > 01:11, schrieb Kevin McCaughey: > I am coming at this from C/C++ and have > fallen in love with Ruby. > After much reading of this forum and asking on > IRC, I think it > would be a real shame to have wxRuby slide into > oblivion.I''ve been absent as I''ve been hoping job sites so haven''t made much progress in getting the wx 2.8.11 contrib lib for property grid added in my local dev files. My test case is from a working wx C++ project. I have the entire interface sans that plus a custom control working in wxRuby. I hit a wall in my lack of experience with SWIG and getting the events correct. I am very intrigued by the post of someone committing a patch getting SWIG 2.x working. I really want to try and find a commit or *something* I can read a diff where a dev added a control so I can see the process. As an aside, implementing a custom wxRuby class to "roll my own" property grid was easy with the current control support, however that defeated the purpose of learning. Maybe we can sweet talk a dev into posting a diff or short tutorial on adding a lib. Seeing the walk through of adding a small lib (maybe making a custom control with a couple I/O and event functions) will be tremendously helpful. If I can get through the wall, I''ll be happy to post the entire app as a tutorial.
On 10/04/12 16:42, tk at tkinnovations.net wrote:> Sorry missed this as Spam Assassin snatched it due to the relay and > lack of rDNS. > >> Content preview: -----BEGIN PGP SIGNED MESSAGE----- Hash: SHA1 Am >> 08.04.2012 >> 01:11, schrieb Kevin McCaughey: > I am coming at this from C/C++ >> and have >> fallen in love with Ruby. > After much reading of this forum and >> asking on >> IRC, I think it > would be a real shame to have wxRuby slide into >> oblivion.Thanks - I totally agree. Chauk-mean has done great work to get things working with SWIG 2.x, and that should be maintainable now. There is a bigger job up ahead of porting to wxWidgets 3.0, which will get the library working again properly on OS X.> I hit a wall in my lack of experience with SWIG and getting the events > correct. I am very intrigued by the post of someone committing a patch > getting SWIG 2.x working. I really want to try and find a commit or > *something* I can read a diff where a dev added a control so I can see > the process.What problem did you run into with the event binding? Our Ohloh page has a list of SVN commits: https://www.ohloh.net/p/wxruby/commits You could have a browse through that - some of the older ones will involve adding classes.> As an aside, implementing a custom wxRuby class to "roll my own" > property grid was easy with the current control support, however that > defeated the purpose of learning. Maybe we can sweet talk a dev into > posting a diff or short tutorial on adding a lib. Seeing the walk > through of adding a small lib (maybe making a custom control with a > couple I/O and event functions) will be tremendously helpful.There''s some stuff on the wiki already on adding a class - is that what you meant by a ''lib''? Anyway, just posting to say that I''m around, even if I might be a bit slow to reply... cheers a