Thank you
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reference #1
TalkLittle WriteLittle
http://www.blogger.com/profile/01692665346700760331Sunday, November 27, 2011
Setting up GNUstep in Windows
9. Follow tutorial at
http://www.gnustep.org/experience/PierresDevTutorial/index.html 1. ProjectCenter doesn't recognize gorm for some reason, which is why I
have to run gorm separately.
2. Also, builds don't work from within ProjectCenter, but thankfully GNUstep
generates makefiles for everything, so from the GNUstep shell you can just
type "make" inside your project, and it'll generate a ProjectName.app
directory for you. Inside that directory, you'll find Windows binaries to run
the app.
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reference #2
GNUstep Configuration Guide
Mr. Dennis Leeuw
Setting the system default backend
... there is a backend that uses X11, libart, cairo or Microsoft® Windows®.
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> Subject: Re: new to group, request clarifications
> From:
theraven@sucs.org> Date: Sun, 22 Dec 2013 11:21:04 +0000
> CC:
a_bright2@hotmail.com;
> To:
rm@gnu.org>
> On 22 Dec 2013, at 11:12, Riccardo Mottola <
rm@gnu.org> wrote:
>
> > It is or would be possible to make "fat packages". It was done in OpenStep and even Mac times ("universal binaries") that include multiple architectures, how this can be done on e.g. Linux and BSD given their system linkers I don't know.
>
> This is part of the reason why openapp exists: if you have a multi-architecture bundle, it will select the correct binary to run for the current platform and run it.
>
> With LanguageKit, we also have JIT-compiled binaries. I have a couple of small apps that are written in Smalltalk and have a tiny shell script as their bundle executable and the source code inside the Resources folder. You can then run them on any platform with a POSIX shell and edlc / LanguageKit installed, without needing any explicit compilation step.
>
> David
>
> -- Sent from my Apple II
>