Although we have shown the compilation command for the simple example, you really should use the automake and autoconf tools, as described in "Autoconf, Automake, Libtool", by G. V. Vaughan et al. The examples used in this book are included in the gtkmm-documentation package, with appropriate build files, so we won't show the build commands in future. You'll just need to find the appropriate directory and type make
.
To simplify compilation, we use pkg-config
, which
is present in all (properly installed) gtkmm installations. This
program 'knows' what compiler switches are needed to compile programs
that use gtkmm. The --cflags
option causes
pkg-config
to output a list of include directories for the
compiler to look in; the --libs
option requests the
list of libraries for the compiler to link with and the directories to
find them in. Try running it from your shell-prompt to see the results on your system.
However, this is even simpler when using the PKG_CHECK_MODULES()
macro in a standard configure.ac file with autoconf and automake.
For instance:
PKG_CHECK_MODULES([MYAPP], [gtkmm-3.0 >= 3.8.0])
This checks for the presence of gtkmm and defines MYAPP_LIBS and MYAPP_CFLAGS for use in your Makefile.am files.
gtkmm-3.0 is the name of the current stable API. There was an older API called gtkmm-2-4 which installs in parallel when it is available. There were several versions of gtkmm-2.4, such as gtkmm 2.10 and there are several versions of the gtkmm-3.0 API. Note that the API name does not change for every version because that would be an incompatible API and ABI break. Theoretically, there might be a future gtkmm-4.0 API which would install in parallel with gtkmm-3.0 without affecting existing applications.
Note that if you mention extra modules in addition to gtkmm-3.0, they should be separated by spaces, not commas.
The GNU site has more information about autoconf and automake.
If you start by experimenting with a small application that you plan to use just for yourself,
it's easier to start with a Makefile similar to the Makefile.example
files
in the Building applications chapter.