[Top][All Lists]
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index]
Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] a question about wx.App()
From: |
Michael Dickens |
Subject: |
Re: [Discuss-gnuradio] a question about wx.App() |
Date: |
Tue, 25 Mar 2008 08:54:18 -0400 |
On Mar 25, 2008, at 1:13 AM, Bill Stevenson wrote:
Oops! Could u tell me the location of _core_.py file? I just found
out the _core.py file, but could not find the _core_.py. Thank you
again!!!
I'm glad you caught my error ... "_core" instead of "_code" ;)
_core.py and _core_.so shuld be in the same directory (in your case, /
usr/lib/python2.5/sitepackages/wx-2.8-gtk2-unicode/wx ). The 'so' is
a shared library, created by wxPython, and is part of a SWIG interface
into wxWidgets (which is a C++ compiled library and includes).
On Mar 25, 2008, at 1:11 AM, Bill Stevenson wrote:
Thank u for your reply!!! I have searched all of my compute, but
could not find out the wxWidgets! Could u tell me what its path is?
Where is it? I really want to look at the C++ code! Thank u!!!
In order to access those codes, you'll need the original source
tarball, extract it, and find those files. Depending on your OS-type,
this can be done as part of the code install - or you might need to
download the tarball (e.g., from < http://www.wxwidgets.org/downloads/
>), extract it, and then start searching around in it.
For example, if you're running on MacOS X and using MacPorts, you can
find the original source via:
sudo port -f patch wxWidgets
pushd `port dir wxWidgets`/work/wxWidgets*
and then search around from there (e.g. "grep -inr 'wx\.App' ."). I
would guess on most Linux'es, you're better off just downloading the
original source tarball and working with it ... just makes sure you
find the correct version of wxWidgets ;) - MLD