Mercurial > hg > xemacs-beta
view nt/installer/Wise/README @ 714:02339d4ebed4
[xemacs-hg @ 2001-12-23 20:28:19 by wmperry]
2001-12-22 William M. Perry <wmperry@gnu.org>
* glyphs-gtk.c (gtk_xpm_instantiate): Don't bother doing the
xpm-color-symbols checks, they are impossible to implement with
GTK's XPM implementation. :(
2001-12-13 William M. Perry <wmperry@gnu.org>
* select-gtk.c (gtk_own_selection): Update to follow the new
method signature. Ignore owned_p as it appears to only be used
for motif hacks.
* redisplay-gtk.c (gtk_output_string): Fixed some warnings about
signed/unsigned comparison.
(gtk_output_gdk_pixmap): Remove clipping code as per change by
andy@xemacs.org to the X11 code.
(gtk_output_pixmap): Make this follow the output_pixmap method
conventions and expose it.
(gtk_output_horizontal_line): Renamed from output_hline, and
expose it in our method structure.
(gtk_ring_bell): Don't ring the bell if volume <= 0
* toolbar-gtk.c (gtk_output_toolbar_button):
(gtk_output_frame_toolbars):
(gtk_redraw_exposed_toolbars):
(gtk_redraw_frame_toolbars): These are now just aliases for the
common_XXX() routines in toolbar-common.c
* toolbar-common.c: New common toolbar implementation. This file
uses only the redisplay_XXX() functions and device methods to draw
the toolbar, and so should be portable across all windowing
systems (other than tty, and even then I imagine text-based stuff
would work if you had a way to select it).
author | wmperry |
---|---|
date | Sun, 23 Dec 2001 20:28:22 +0000 |
parents | 74fd4e045ea6 |
children |
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To use: You need to build and install the XEmacs distribution. Also you need the xemacs packages in both source and installed versions. Edit "dirs.py" to reflect the locations of the above components. Edit "version.py" to reflect the current version, as well as the welcome message. Run python pre_wise.py > xemacs-XXX.wse (for XXX use a version or date code of your choosing) Run cmd /c xemacs-XXX.wse to produce xemacs-XXX.exe "pre_wise.py" is a preprocessor for the Wise installer maker. It reads "xemacs.tmpl" which is a Wise input file, except that certain portions are enclosed in triple angle brackets <<<like this>>> These portions are evaluated as Python expressions and replaced by the string representations of the resulting value. This allows for things to change from release to release without having to re-do the Wise installation each time. Also it keeps you from having to manually drag-n-drop all the package files, which is rather tedious!