It is very difficult to set up Python or Ruby on Windows XP.
Simple HTML works better, everywhere, it covers all our needs,
and it isn't any harder to write.
This documentation is now installed.
This saves 20 MiB and 4 MiB of libraries in MSYS2 and bundle
builds respectively, in total, without any adverse effects.
The MSYS2 build remains bloated, due to the Adwaita icon theme.
Bump minimum CMake version to avoid a bug.
- Add a missing runtime library for gettext-tools.
- Remove the no longer necessary customized FindGettext.cmake,
since the downloaded gettext binaries are new enough.
- Make the installer at least ask to uninstall previous versions.
- Adjust the PATH of tests so that they'll run on Windows directly.
- Fix quoting so that the project will build inside paths with spaces.
- Resolve a GSettings deprecation warning.
- Update the README's build instructions as appropriate.
- Require CMake 3.9 because of the README's suggestion to fix
FindPkgConfig.cmake manually using separate_arguments(UNIX_COMMAND).
Tested build configurations:
- native Arch Linux,
- native Windows XP with the newest NSIS,
- Arch Linux Mingw-w64 i686 Win32Depends.cmake NSIS cross-build + XP,
- Arch Linux Mingw-w64 x86_64 MSYS2 NSIS cross-build + Windows 10.
Detected issues:
- The file save dialog will not add the extension automatically,
seen with MSYS2.
The one depicting symbol selection has been removed since it's no longer
deemed useful: the status bar hint on startup should be enough.
There is no need for a separate picture in the project root anymore.
While we've lost precise control over the output, there's a lot less
noise in the files and we've gained a cheap way of producing user
documentation in the HTML format.
Apparently I was eyeing DocBook all those years ago as well. I /think/
it proved to be a little bit too hard to write that way, or to get
visually satisfying results. Nonetheless, the raw format is capable of
specifying figures with multiple pictures, so we might want to revisit
the idea some other day.
The documents have been slightly updated to reflect the "recent" changes
in program function and hosting. Some issues have also been corrected
in the English translation.
It seems that I cannot win here. If I want XP to work, I need to keep
the old packages in place. This time the resulting program cannot
find _time32 in msvcrt.dll.
gtk-doc has gained an official CMake module which can fix xrefs.
Meanwhile, our old module has stopped working for whatever reason,
might be that I've botched the LdCategoryView interface somehow.
We don't depend on any proprietary services no longer. I'll have to
make my own replacements with blackjack and hookers. Until then,
the file stays in the commit log as an example.
I've come to the conclusion that copyright mostly just stands in the way
of software development. In my jurisdiction I cannot give up my own
copyright and 0BSD seems to be the closest thing to public domain.
The updated mail address, also used in my author/committer lines,
is shorter and looks nicer. People rarely interact anyway.