notepad-plus-plus/scintilla/qt/ScintillaEditPy
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Upgrade Scintilla from v3.56 to v4.14
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README
ScintillaConstants.py.template
ScintillaEditPy.pro
global.h
sepbuild.py
testsepq.py
typesystem_ScintillaEdit.xml.template

README

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README for building of ScintillaEditPy on Qt with PySide

This directory is for building a Python encapsulation of Scintilla for use
with PySide. For C++ libraries see the README in the parent directory.

	Prerequisites

PySide and ScintillaEditPy currently only support Python 2.x.

CMake may be used to rebuild PySide and is required on Windows.
It can be downloaded from
http://www.cmake.org/cmake/resources/software.html

On Windows, PySide only supports Visual C++ 2008. The "Visual Studio 2008
Command Prompt" should be used to run all build commands.
Visual C++ 2008 Express Edition can be downloaded from
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/express/future/bb421473

Download and install PySide. Instructions are on the PySide web site
http://developer.qt.nokia.com/wiki/Category:LanguageBindings::PySide::Downloads

For Linux, there may be both PySide library packages and PySide development
files. Both should be installed as ScintillaEditPy needs the headers and
libraries from the development package and runs with the normal library package.
On apt-based systems, the packages are libshiboken-dev, shiboken, libpyside-dev,
and python-pyside. python-dev is also needed for Python language headers.
On yum-based systems the packages are shiboken-devel, python-pyside-devel,
and python-devel.
The qmake program may be called qmake-qt5 or qmake-qt4.
It can be found with:
which qmake-qt5 || which qmake-qt4 || which qmake

On Windows, the PySide library packages can be downloaded from
http://developer.qt.nokia.com/wiki/PySide_Binaries_Windows
The PySide development files must be built from source using CMake as
described on the PySide site. This will create a Unix-style set of [bin, include,
lib, and share] directories in packaging\setuptools\install-py<ver>-qt<qver>.
There is no standard place for the PySide development files so copy them
to "\usr", creating it if needed.

On OS X, a combined package with PySide libraries and PySide development
files can be downloaded from
http://developer.qt.nokia.com/wiki/PySide_Binaries_MacOSX
This package works best in combination with the Qt libraries for Mac from
http://qt.nokia.com/downloads/downloads#qt-lib

The path should be modified so that a Python 2.x interpreter and Qt's "qmake"
program can be run by typing "python" or "qmake".

	Building

There are several steps to building and they are encapsulated in the sepbuild.py
script which is run:

python sepbuild.py

This script first runs the WidgetGen.py script to fill out the ScintillaEdit.h,
ScintillaEdit.cpp and ScintillaConstants.py files.

A short file "sepbuild.pri" is written out which contains a series of version and
path properties discovered by sepbuild.py which are used by qmake.

Then it runs PySide's "shiboken" program to create C++ code that will act as a
bridge between Python and the C++ libraries. This code goes into the
ScintillaEditPy/ScintillaEditPy directory. Several log files are produced which can
help uncover problems in the bridge if it fails to build.

The qmake program is run to produce make files from ScintillaEditPy.pro.

The system make program is then run to build the library. The library is located in
the scintilla/bin directory as ScintillaEditPy.so for Unix systems and
ScintillaEditPy.pyd for Windows.

A demonstration program can be run:

python testsepq.py

The individual steps in the script can be run manually if wanted although the
shiboken program has complex arguments and differs between systems so run
sepbuild.py and copy the section starting with a line containing "generatorrunner"
and continuing to "typesystem_ScintillaEdit.xml".

On Windows, it is more difficult to set up an environment to debug ScintillaEditPy
since all the libraries have to be debug or all have to be release. The easy path
is to always build for release with "nmake release".

To remove generated code, run "python sepbuild.py --clean".