To build and install kcpp, you need to install b2 build toolchain:
To build kcpp docs, you need to install boost doc toolchain (including boostbook and quickbook):
Kcpp can be built and installed on Linux, Windows, Unix, etc. This doc can be applied to all of those operating systems.
However, it is well tested on these c++ compilers:
Expected work on these c++ compilers:
To build and install kcpp, you need a modern c++ compiler, and b2 build.
Get kcpp source code.
$ cd kcpp $ b2 help # Show project help, provided by kcpp. $ b2 --help # Show b2 program help, provided by b2 build. $ b2 config --prefix=/sand # config, this is not build.
$ b2 -q -j7 # Start build.
The default build will choose minimized build, which can be applied to all supported compilers on all operating systems listed in the beginning of this doc.
$ b2 -q -j7 all
Full build is done by target all, which is only applied to specific compiler on specific operating system, that it is useful for kcpp library developer(s), and the kcpp library users do not have to care it.
Note | |
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Please note that when I said the kcpp library users, I did not mean the library users are rabble. Just they do not need to full build kcpp tests really, which can save lots of time and avoid unrelated verifications. The library developer(s) treat themself as library users sometimes, because they need it. In that case I wrote library for myself, then I use my library, so I am library user now. |
$ su # b2 install
To build kcpp docs, you need b2 build and boost doc toolchain, including boostbook and quickbook.
Kcpp docs are written with boost quickbook, they are lots of qbk files.
$ cd <KCPP-SOURCE-ROOT>/docs $ b2 -q -j7
The html docs will be generated to <KCPP-SOURCE-ROOT>/docs/html/ from qbk files .
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