This contains all the files needed to build TreeSheets for various platforms. If instead you just want to USE TreeSheets, you may be better off with the binaries available on http://strlen.com/treesheets/
TreeSheets has been licensed under the ZLIB license (see ZLIB_LICENSE.txt).
src
contains all source code. The code is dense, terse, and with few comments, typical for a codebase that was never
intended to be used by more than one person (me). On the positive side, you'll find the code very small and simple,
with all functionality easy to find and only in one place (no copy pasting or over-engineering). Enjoy.
TS
is the folder that contains all user-facing files, typically the build process results in an executable to be put
in the root of this folder, and distributing to users is then a matter of giving them this folder.
TODO.txt
is the random notes I kept on ideas of myself and others on what future features could be added.
Note that YOU are responsible to know how to use compilers and C++, the hints below are all the help I will give you:
All Platforms:
- TreeSheets requires wxWidgets 3.1 or better. Preferrably the last public release, or bleeding edge from https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets.git if you're adventurous.
Windows:
- Make sure your
wxWidgets
folder sits parallel to thesrc
folder, that way the TreeSheets project will pick it up without further modifications - (If from git): Copy
include\wx\msw\setup0.h
toinclude\wx\msw\setup.h
- Inside
wxWidgets/build/msw
, openwx_vc14.sln
with Visual Studio 2017. - Select all projects (except the project
_custom_build
) in the solution explorer, and go to properties:- Set configuration to debug, and C/C++ -> Code Generation -> Runtime library to Multithreaded Debug
- Set configuration to release, and C/C++ -> Code Generation -> Runtime library to Multithreaded
- Build solution in both Debug and Release (if fails, may have to build again)
- Close the wxWidgets solution
- "treesheets" contains the Visual Studio 2017 files for treesheets, open the .sln. If you've done the above correctly, TreeSheets will now compile and pick up the wxWidgets libraries.
- To distribute, build an installer with
TS_installer.nsi
(requires nsis.sourceforge.net)
Linux:
- Using the version of wxWidgets from https://github.com/wxWidgets/wxWidgets.git
- Follow the instructions to build there, but add
--enable-unicode
and--disabled-shared
to theconfigure
step.
- Follow the instructions to build there, but add
- Build with
cmake -DCMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Release .
or similar. Note that you must currently use an "in tree" build, since TreeSheets will look for its files relative to the binary. - There is also a
src/Makefile
, this is deprecated.
OSX:
- Build wxWidgets as follows (inside the wxWidgets dir):
mkdir build_osx
cd build_osx
../configure --enable-unicode --enable-optimize=-O2 --disable-shared --without-libtiff --with-osx_cocoa CXXFLAGS="-stdlib=libc++" LDFLAGS="-stdlib=libc++" OBJCXXFLAGS="-stdlib=libc++" --with-macosx-sdk=/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX10.14.sdk --with-macosx-version-min=10.7 --disable-mediactrl CC=clang CXX=clang++
make -j8
sudo make install
- use the XCode project in
osx/TreeSheets
to build treesheets. put the resulting .app together with the files from theTS
folder inosx/TreeSheetsBeta
to distribute. Note to use the "Archive" operation to create a release executable.
I welcome contributions, especially in the form of neatly prepared pull requests. The main thing to keep in mind when contributing is to keep as close as you can to both the format and the spirit of the existing code, even if it goes against the grain of how you program normally. That means not only using the same formatting and naming conventions (which should be easy), but the same non-redundant style of code (no under-engineering, e.g. copy pasting, and no over engineering, e.g. needless abstractions).
Also be economic in terms of features: treesheets tries to accomplish a lot with few features, additional user interface elements (even menu items) have a cost, and features that are only useful for very few people should probably not be in the master branch. Needless to say, performance is important too. When in doubt, ask me :)
Try to keep your pull requests small (don't bundle unrelated changes) and make sure you've done extensive testing before you submit, preferrably on multiple platforms.