![]() You will now have a binary (~/nomacs/build/nomacs), which you can test (or use directly). Go to the nomacs/ImageLounge directory and run cmake to get the Makefiles: mkdir build This will by default place the source into ~/nomacs Get the required packages: sudo apt-get install debhelper cdbs qt5-qmake qttools5-dev-tools qt5-default qttools5-dev libqt5svg5-dev qt5-image-formats-plugins libexiv2-dev libraw-dev libopencv-dev cmake libtiff-dev libquazip5-dev libwebp-dev git build-essential lcov libzip-devĬlone the nomacs repository from GitHub: git clone check if your builds proceeded correctly.check if your Qt is set correctly (otherwise set the path to qt_install_dir/qtbase/bin/qmake.exe).check if you have setup opencv (otherwise uncheck ENABLE_OPENCV).Python scripts/make.py "qt/bin" -lib-path "nomacs/3rd-party/build" To do so you need to: git submodule update -init -remote scripts I like having a separate developer build (without submodules) that uses 3rd party libs already compiled. Right-click the nomacs project and choose Set as StartUp Project.īuild individual projects using: python scripts/make.py "qt/bin" -project quazip,libraw -force If you are using Visual Studio, you can then double-click build/nomacs/nomacs.sln. ![]() This will build nomacs into build/nomacs. Now call: python scripts/make.py "qtpath/bin" ![]() Project folders in 3rd-party will not be empty anymore. Visual Studio), python, git, and Qt installed. ![]() nomacs is licensed under the GNU General Public License v3 and available for Windows, Linux, FreeBSD, Mac, and OS/2. You can use it for viewing all common image formats including RAW and psd images. Nomacs is a free, open source image viewer, which supports multiple platforms. ![]()
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