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1Building wxPython on Win32
2--------------------------
3
4
5Building wxPython for use on win32 systems is a fairly simple process
6consisting of just a few steps. However depending on where you get
7your sources from and what your desired end result is, there are
8several permutations of those steps. At a high level the basic steps
9are:
10
11 1. Get the wxWindows sources
12 2. Build the wxWindows DLL
13 3. Get the wxPython sources
14 4. Build and Install wxPython
15
16We'll go into more detail of each of these steps below, but first a
17few bits of background information on tools.
18
19I use a tool called SWIG (http://www.swig.org) to help generate the
20C++ sources used in the wxPython extension module. However you don't
21need to have SWIG unless you want to modify the *.i files. If you do
22you'll want to have version 1.1-883 of SWIG and you'll need to change
23a flag in the setup.py script as described below.
24
25I use the new Python Distutils tool to build wxPython. It is included
26with Python 2.0, but if you want to use Python 1.5.2 or 1.6 then
27you'll need to download and install Distutils 1.0 from
28http://www.python.org/sigs/distutils-sig/
29
30I use Microsoft Visual C++ 6.0 (5.0 with the service packs should work
31also) to compile the wxPython C++ sources. Since I am using Distutils
32it should be easier now to build with other win32 compilers such as
33the free mingw32 or Borland compilers, but I havn't tried them yet.
34If anybody wants to try it I'll take any required patches for the
35setup script and for these instructions.
36
37And now on to the fun stuff...
38
39
40
411. Get the wxWindows sources
42----------------------------
43
44A. There are a few possible ways to get sources for wxWindows. You
45 can download a released version from http://wxwindows.org/ or you
46 can get current development sources from the CVS server. (Some
47 information about annonymous CVS access is at
48 http://wxwindows.org/cvs.htm.) The advantage of using CVS is that
49 you can easily update as soon as the developers check in new
50 sources or fixes. The advantage of using a released version is
51 that it usually has had more testing done. You can decide which
52 method is best for you.
53
54B. You'll usually want to use wxWindows sources that have the same
55 version number as the wxPython sources you are using. (Another
56 advantage of using CVS is that you'll get both at the same time.)
57
58C. Once you get the sources be sure to put them in a path without a
59 space in it (i.e., NOT c:\Program Files\wx) and set an environment
60 variable named WXWIN to this directory. For example:
61
62 mkdir \wx2
63 cd \wx2
64 unzip wxMSW-2.2.2.zip
65 set WXWIN=c:\wx2
66
67 You'll probably want to add that last line to your autoexec.bat or
68 System Properties depending on the type of system you are on.
69
70D. Change to the wx2\include\wx\msw directory and copy setup0.h to
71 setup.h and then edit setup.h. This is how you control which parts
72 of wxWindows are compiled into or left out of the build, simply by
73 turning options on or off. At a minimum you should set the
74 following:
75
76 wxUSE_NEW_GRID 1
77 wxUSE_GLOBAL_MEMORY_OPERATORS 0
78 wxUSE_LIBTIFF 1
79 wxDIALOG_UNIT_COMPATIBILITY 0
80
81 I also turn off the following as they are not currently used in
82 wxPython. There are probably others that can be turned off to
83 help save space, but I havn't investigated all the potential
84 configurations yet. Please note that wxPython doesn't (yet) check
85 these flags for its own build, so if you turn off something that
86 wxPython expects then you'll get link errors later on.
87
88 wxUSE_DIALUP_MANAGER 0
89 wxUSE_DYNLIB_CLASS 0
90 wxUSE_DOC_VIEW_ARCHITECTURE 0
91 wxUSE_PLOT 0
92 wxUSE_POSTSCRIPT_ARCHITECTURE_IN_MSW 0
93
94
95 ** NEW **
96 Be sure that wxUSE_GLCANVAS is defined to be 0 as wxPython now
97 keeps its own copy of the glcanvas sources and expects that it is
98 not in the main library. This is done to reduce the number of
99 dependant DLLs on the core library and therefore help reduce
100 startup time.
101
102
103
1042. Build the wxWindows DLL
105---------------------------
106
107A. Although MSVC project files are provided I always use the makefiles
108 to build wxWindows because by default the flags are compatible with
109 Python, (and I make sure they stay that way.) You would have to
110 edit the project files a bit to make it work otherwise.
111
112B. There are three different types of wxWindows DLLs that can be
113 produced by the VC makefile simply by providing a flag on the nmake
114 command-line, I call the three types DEBUG, FINAL, and HYBRID.
115 (The last one is brand new, you'll need my version of the 2.2.2
116 sources to get the HYBRID capability.) Here are some more details:
117
118 DEBUG Specified with "FINAL=0" and produces a DLL named
119 wx[version]d.dll. This DLL is compiled with full
120 debugging information and with the __WXDEBUG__ set which
121 enables some debugging-only code in wxWindows such as
122 assertions and failure log messages. The /MDd flag is
123 used which means that it is linked with the debugging
124 version of the C runtime library and also that you must
125 use the debugging version of Python, (python_d.exe and
126 pythonXX_d.dll) which also means that all extensions
127 loaded by Python should also have the _d in the name.
128 With this option you can use the MSVC debugger to trace
129 though the Python interpreter, as well as the code for the
130 wxPython extension and the wxWindows DLL.
131
132 FINAL Specified with "FINAL=1" and produces a DLL named
133 wx[version].dll. This DLL is compiled with optimizations
134 turned on and without debugging information and without
135 __WXDEBUG__. The /MD flag is used which means that you
136 can use this version with the standard python.exe. This
137 is the version that I use when making the binary installer
138 for win32.
139
140 HYBRID Specified with "FINAL=hybrid" and produces a DLL named
141 wx[version]h.dll. This DLL is almost the same as the
142 DEBUG version except the /MD flag is used which means that
143 you can use the standard python.exe but you still get the
144 debugging info and the __WXDEBUG__ code enabled. With the
145 debugger you can trace through the the code for the
146 wxPython extension and the wxWindows DLL, but not the
147 Python interpreter. You might use this version when you
148 want to deploy a wxPython app with the __WXDEBUG__ code
149 enabled. I use this mode most of the time during
150 development simply because it's easier than having to
151 remember to type python_d all the time.
152
153 Since different DLL names and object file directories are used you
154 can build all three types if you like.
155
156C. Change to the wx2\src\msw directory and type the following command,
157 using the value for FINAL that you want:
158
159 nmake -f makefile.vc dll pch FINAL=hybrid
160
161 Your machine will then crunch away for possibly a long time,
162 depending on your hardware, and when it's done you should have a
163 DLL and some library files in \wx2\lib.
164
165D. You'll either need to add \wx2\lib to the PATH or copy the DLL file
166 to a directory already on the PATH so the DLL can be found at runtime.
167
168E. You can test your build by changing to one of the directories under
169 \wx2\samples or \wx2\demos and typing (using the right FINAL flag):
170
171 nmake -f makefile.vc FINAL=hybrid WXUSINGDLL=1
172
173 and then executing the resulting .exe file.
174
175
176
1773. Get the wxPython sources
178---------------------------
179
180A. You have the same options (and same advantages/disadvantages) for
181 getting the wxPython source, either a released snapshot or from
182 CVS. The released version file is named wxPython-[version].tar.gz
183 and is available at http://wxpython.org/download.php. You can use
184 WinZip to unpack it if you don't have tar and gzip. If you want to
185 use CVS you'll find wxPython in the wxWindows CVS tree (see above)
186 in the wxWindows/wxPython directory.
187
188
189
1904. Build and Install wxPython
191-----------------------------
192
193A. As mentioned previouslly, wxPython is built with the standard
194 Python Distutils tool. If you are using Python 2.0c1 or later you
195 are all set, otherwise you need to download and install Distutils
196 1.0 from http://www.python.org/sigs/distutils-sig/.
197
198B. Change to the root wxPython directory and look at the setup.py
199 file. This is the script that configures and defines all the
200 information that Distutils needs to build wxPython. There are some
201 options near the begining of the script that you may want or need
202 to change based on what options you have selected up to this point,
203 (type of DLL built, sources from tar.gz or from CVS, etc.) You can
204 either change these flags directly in setup.py or supply them on
205 the command-line.
206
207 BUILD_GLCANVAS Set to zero if you don't want to build the
208 Open GL canvas extension module.
209
210 BUILD_OGL Set to zero if you don't want to build the
211 Object Graphics Library extension module.
212
213 BUILD_STC Set to zero if you don't want to build the
214 wxStyledTextCtrl (the Scintilla wrapper)
215 extension module.
216
217 USE_SWIG If you have edited any of the *.i files you
218 will need to set this flag to non-zero so SWIG
219 will be executed to regenerate the wrapper C++
220 and shadow python files.
221
222 IN_CVS_TREE If you are using the CVS version of the
223 wxWindows and wxPython sources then you will
224 need to set this flag to non-zero. This is
225 needed because some source files from the
226 wxWindows tree are copied to be under the
227 wxPython tree in order to keep Distutils happy.
228 With this flag set then setup.py will
229 automatically keep these copied sources up to
230 date if the original version is ever updated.
231 If you are using the tar.gz version of the
232 Python sources then these copied sources are
233 already present in your source tree.
234
235
236C. To build and install wxPython you simply need to execute the
237 setup.py script. If you have more than one version of Python
238 installed, be sure to execute setup.py with the version you want to
239 build wxPython for.
240
241 Depending on what kind of wxWindows DLL you built there are
242 different command-line parameters you'll want to pass to setup (in
243 addition to possibly one or more of the above):
244
245 FINAL: python setup.py install
246
247 DEBUG: python setup.py build --debug install
248
249 HYBRID: python setup.py HYBRID=1 install
250
251
252D. At this point you should be able to change into the wxPython\demo
253 directory and run the demo:
254
255 python demo.py
256
257E. If you would like to make a test build that doesn't overwrite the
258 installed version of wxPython you can do so with one of these
259 commands instead of the install command above:
260
261 FINAL: python setup.py build_ext --inplace
262
263 DEBUG: python setup.py build_ext --debug --inplace
264
265 HYBRID: python setup.py HYBRID=1 build_ext --inplace
266
267 This will build the wxPython package in the local wxPython
268 directory instead of installing it under your Python installation.
269 To run using this test version just add the base wxPython source
270 directory to the PYTHONPATH:
271
272 set PYTHONPATH=c:\wx2\wxPython
273 cd c:\wx2\wxPython\demo
274 python demo.py
275
276
277That's all folks!
278
279
280-----------------
281robin@alldunn.com
282