Gtk-WARNING Could not find signal handler on netbeans - netbeans

I'm building an interface using glade and gtk programming on c using netbeans. I've set up my project following this tutorial. I even added libgmodule2-0.so and libglib2-0.so to the linker options of netbeans. When I run i get the warning Gtk-WARNING Could not find signal handle. When I close the mainwindow nothing happens (this is where my signal should be caught)
If I compile my program like this (not using netbeans)
gcc -o tut main.c $(pkg-config --cflags --libs gtk+-2.0 gmodule-2.0)
it works fine. When I close the mainwindow it closes.
I like using IDEs because all the features I get (specially debugging). Any suggestion for this problem?

I think that adding libgmodule2-0.so and libglib2-0.so to the linker options is not enough. Run the command pkg-config --cflags gtk+-2.0 gmodule-2.0 in your terminal and see what it says. Add any directories listed with -I to the include directories of your NetBeans project, and add any other flags to the C compiler options.
Then run pkg-config --libs gtk+-2.0 gmodule-2.0 in your terminal and add anything listed there to the linker options.

Related

Installing GTK for use in Code::Blocks on Windows 10

Original Question
I am having trouble installing gtk to start building GUIs in C++ on Code::Blocks. Could anyone nudge me in the right direction? I'm running Windows 10 (64-bit) on a Lenovo.
I attempted an installation guide (https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jvQXvTtSIQo), stack overflow (How do you install GTK+ 3.0 on Windows?), the official GTK installation guide (https://www.gtk.org/download/windows.php), a written guide (http://www.tarnyko.net/repo/gtk3_build_system/tutorial/gtk3_tutorial.htm), and just noticed a very similar stack overflow (Install GTK for c on Windows 10?)
Before this, my PATH environment variable only recorded C:\Users\Owner\AppData\Local\Microsoft\WindowsApps;C:\Users\Owner\AppData\Roaming\npm;C:\Users\Owner\AppData\Local\atom\bin;%USERPROFILE%\AppData\Local\Microsoft\WindowsApps;
I downloaded MinGW from mingw.org. This was to the youtube link's comment that the official is more stable than the one that can be installed with Code::Blocks. I added C:\MinGW\bin to PATH.
Trying the official GTK installation site, I downloaded MSYS2 and used pacman -Syu to install core system packages and pacman -Su to then update. That's the end of that, so I think gtk is officially installed, I just need to get it to talk to Code::Blocks. I added C:\msys64\mingw64\bin to PATH but that didn't seem to work.
I tried to install the all-in-one bundle for GTK 3.6.4 at http://www.tarnyko.net/dl/gtk.htm , and extracted it to C:\gtk. I now have C:\gtk\bin in PATH. GTK should be in my path in one form or the other. I can run gtk3-demo and gtk-demo-application from CMD but not MSYS2. I'm a bit confused about that. It probably has something to do with MSYS2's specific path variable, I think? But it should search the system's PATH afterward? And I don't know how to change that specific path? Probably questions for another day.
So the similar stack overflow, youtube, and written tutorial all say to use pkg-config --cflags --libs gtk+-3.0 to check for a reasonable output to see if I have gtk correctly installed. I installed
pkg-config-lite to avoid the glib circular dependency issue that How to install pkg config in windows? describes and frankly I do not understand. I added it to C:\MinGW\bin to by in my path. Now I am able to run it, but get:
Package gtk+-3.0 was not found in the pkg-config search path.
Perhaps you should add the directory containing `gtk+-3.0.pc'
to the PKG_CONFIG_PATH environment variable
No package 'gtk+-3.0' found
I tried 3.6.4 instead of 3.0. No dice. I tried just 3. Nope. I can only find gtk3 files, and not the actual version I installed anywhere. pkg-config --cflags --libs says that I need to name a library, so I tried just gtk hopiing to get libraries containing that. Nope. The rest of the tutorials are aimed at getting Code::Blocks compiler (I think) to include gtk. I hope this is the only obstacle, and I will be able to get the rest. But, if anyone can help me through the rest, it would be appreciated.
At this point I'm out of ideas. Can someone help me?
Gratefully,
John
More Questions After Liberforce's Answer
Thank you for writing up https://www.gtk.org/download/windows.php !! I bet it helps a lot of frustrated newbies like myself. I will kindly offer more proper feedback after I get everything to work. I am stuck on compiling a C/C++ program, if you can help more. Before I get to that, I want to be very clear about the precise steps I took. The step names correspond to your written instructions.
Step 1: Install MSYS2
Alright, resetting everything...
Removed C:/gtk directory from PATH and from computer, aka all the tarnyko files.
Removed C:/MinGW directory from PATH and from computer, effectively uninstalling. I read your conversation with Simon (Unable to compile code with GTK and https://chat.stackoverflow.com/rooms/156828/discussion-between-liberforce-and-simon) about the confusion between MinGW's terminal which includes msys1.0 and MSYS2 terminal which includes MinGW. I figured this would be safer.
Thus, I only have C:\msys64 in PATH (and what I had before, irrelevant to GTK).
Uninstalled MSYS2 (via Add/Remove Programs) and reinstalled using the x86_64 from www.msys2.org. On pacman -Syu, I received error, "msys2-runtime and catgets are in conflict" and "msys2-runtime and libcatgets are in conflict." Entered y to remove both.
I keep uninstalling and reinstallling but I hit the following problem... (5/5) upgrading pacman was at 100% and the warning pops up:
warning: terminate MSYS2 without returning to shell and check for updates again
warning: for example close your terminal window instead of calling exit
The program halts here. I assume this means to close the window. I did, and clicked OK for the dialogue "Processes are running in session: Close anyway?." Window now printed "Hangup signal received" and it is no longer responding. I use task-manager to kill it.
Openning MSYS2 by the desktop application after the first pacman -Syu gave me the dialogue to choose which shell: MSYS2, Mingw-w64 32 bit, Mingw-w64 64 bit. I instead went into the filesystem and openned C:\msys64\msys2_shell.cmd for all future instances.
Ran pacman -Syu to finish installing packages. I restart MSYS2 again, and ran pacman -Su to reveal
:: Starting core system upgrade...
there is nothing to do
:: Starting full system upgrade...
there is nothing to do
pacman -Syuu showed:
:: Synchronizing package databases...
mingw32 is up to date
mingw64 is up to date
msys is up to date
The pacman -Su, pacman -Sy, and pacman -Suu likewise reveal everything okay. Closed and reopenned C:\msys64\msys2_shell.cmd
pkg-cofig just gives "bash: pkg-config: command not found." So I ran pacman -S pkg-config and got that working. update-core, though, which is mentioned in https://github.com/msys2/msys2/wiki/MSYS2-installation cannot be found, and pacman -S update-core will not work. pacman -Ss core turns up:
msys/coreutils 8.26-2 (base) [installed]
The basic file, shell and text manipulation utilities of the GNU operating
system
And other files that seem unrelated. Results of pacman -Ss core likewise seem irrelevant.
pacman --version shows:
.--. Pacman v5.0.1 - libalpm v10.0.1
/ _.-' .-. .-. .-. Copyright (C) 2006-2016 Pacman Development Team
\ '-. '-' '-' '-' Copyright (C) 2002-2006 Judd Vinet
'--'
This program may be freely redistributed under
the terms of the GNU General Public License.
Ran "pacman --needed -S bash pacman pacman-mirrors msys2-runtime" to reveal:
warning: bash-4.4.019-2 is up to date -- skipping
warning: pacman-5.0.1-5 is up to date -- skipping
warning: pacman-mirrors-20160112-1 is up to date -- skipping
warning: msys2-runtime-2.10.0-2 is up to date -- skipping
there is nothing to do
I exited out of all msys shells, and ran C:\msys64\autorebase.bat, although not on a 32 bit system. I believe there is a typo when it says to reopen msys2_shell.bat, which I do not have. I openned msys2_shell.cmd. I use pacman -Suu once more to reveal that everything is okay.
Step 2 -> Step 5 (optional): Install build tools
Openned C:\msys64\msys2_shell.cmd and ran "pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-gtk3" (GTK+3 package) and "pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-toolchain base-devel" (package to develop GTK+3 applications in other languages) (defaulted to all installations when prompted).
Failed to Compile a GTK+3 Application
Restarted computer. Openned C:\msys64\msys2_shell.cmd. Following https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/stable/gtk-getting-started.html.
Put the simple window tutorial file in C:\Users\Owner\Desktop\test_code\example-0.c . When running gcc pkg-config --cflags gtk+-3.0 -o example-0 example-0.c pkg-config --libs gtk+-3.0 , got the error in my original question. Used "pacman -Ss gtk3" to see two packages I think I need. Ran "pacman -S mingw-w64-x86_64-gtk3 mingw-w64-x86_64-gtkmm3" .
To answer your questions to Simon about this same error at Unable to compile code with GTK , pkg-config --list-all | grep gtk returns nothing, even after closing and reopenning C:\msys64\msys2_shell.cmd. "which gcc" returns:
which: no gcc
in(/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/opt/bin:/c/Windows/System32:
/c/Windows:/c/Windows/System32/Wbem:/c/Windows/System32/WindowsPowerShell/v1.0/:
/usr/bin/site_perl:/usr/bin/vendor_perl:/usr/bin/core_perl)
I see gtk-3.0 under C:\msys64\mingw64\include. I have no idea how to add this to the path. "echo $PKG_CONFIG_PATH" returns:
/usr/lib/pkgconfig:/usr/share/pkgconfig:/lib/pkgconfig
Correctly Compiled a File in Console with GTK+3
Checked that GTK was in Console
I needed to open up MSYS2 in a Mingw-w64 64 bit shell. This can be preformed via the Desktop app for MSYS2 which prompts you which one of three shells you want to open: MSYS2, Mingw32, and Mingw64. Specifically, me installing gtk with the command mingw-w64-x86_64-toolchain means it can only be accessed this way.
Commands in this shell show that I do, in fact, have gtk:
$ pkg-config --modversion gtk+-3.0 --> 3.22.29
$ which gcc --> /mingw64/bin/gcc
Compiled Sample Code from Mingw64 Console
I referenced https://github.com/msys2/msys2/wiki/MSYS2-introduction to learn the file system / drive mounting syntax. I will place the sample code gotten from https://developer.gnome.org/gtk3/stable/gtk-getting-started.html in `/c/Users/Owner/Desktop/test_code/example-0.c'. I just used my favorite IDE, Atom, but any text editor would do.
Openned MSYS2's Mingw64 shell, cd /c/Users/Owner/Desktop/test_code/ , compiled with gcc \pkg-config --cflags gtk+-3.0` -o example-0 example-0.c `pkg-config --libs gtk+-3.0`` , and execute with ./example-0
Unsuccessful to Link GTK+3 and the Code::Blocks Compiler
I Understand some Linker Settings
I went into Code::Blocks. Went to Settings > Compiler... Made sure to use the dropdown box under Selected compiler to select GNU GCC Compiler, and clicked Reset Defaults because of complications when I first installed Code::Blocks. The check boxes under Compiler Flags should all blank after the reset, and so I checked "Have g++ follow the C++14 ISO C++ language standard [-std=c++14]" under General and "Enable all common compiler warnings (overrides many other settings) [-Wall]" under Warnings.
Next to where it says Compiler Flags, I went to Linker settings and added text to Other linker options. I got this text by running pkg-config --cflags gtk+-3.0:
-mms-bitfields -pthread -mms-bitfields -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/gtk-3.0 -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/cairo -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/pango-1.0 -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/fribidi -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/atk-1.0 -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/cairo -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/pixman-1 -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/freetype2 -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/harfbuzz -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/libpng16 -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/gdk-pixbuf-2.0 -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/libpng16 -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include/glib-2.0 -IC:/msys64/mingw64/lib/glib-2.0/include -IC:/msys64/mingw64/include -LC:/msys64/mingw64/lib -lgtk-3 -lgdk-3 -lgdi32 -limm32 -lshell32 -lole32 -Wl,-luuid -lwinmm -ldwmapi -lsetupapi -lcfgmgr32 -lz -lpangowin32-1.0 -lpangocairo-1.0 -lpango-1.0 -lfribidi -latk-1.0 -lcairo-gobject -lcairo -lgdk_pixbuf-2.0 -lgio-2.0 -lgobject-2.0 -lglib-2.0 -lintl
Explanation: When compiling from console, I used a command that included the text /pkg-config --cflags gtk+-3.0`` . The backticks mean to run pkg-config --cflags gtk+-3.0 BEFORE the higher-level compilation command, and insert whatever text comes out into the higher-level compilation command. Code::Blocks needs that text under the Linker settings.
I do not Understand the Search Directories
In Settings > Compiler... , beside where it says Compiler Settings, I clicked Search directories. I know you need to do some work here. After this, you go back to Linker Settings to finish, and your Code::Blocks will be ready to go!
If anyone can help me here, or if I figure it out, I would love to finish, in case this helps posterity. I have GTK compiling, and that is good enough for now.
Ok, let's start from the beginning.
Don't use tarnyko packages, they're outdated and not maintained anymore
Official way to get GTK+ 3 on Windows is through MSYS2
Don't blindly follow every guide you find on the internet, mixing them all together and expect things to work. Things change, and something that was advertised at some point can be outdated and plain wrong at the time you read it. If you cook a dish with 3 different recipes at the same time, don't expect it to taste good.
So:
Remove all remnants of the tarnyko bundle
Remove pkg-config-lite. pkg-config is already installed through MSYS2 if you follow official installations
Try to get things working with the MSYS2 guide (pkg-config detection, and compiling a simple GTK+ program) without the Code::Blocks integration first
Once this works, making it work on Code::Block should be a matter of setting some environment variables and pointing to the right pkg-config.
I used gtk+ bundle_2.24.10 32 bit on Windows 7.
I downloaded it from tarnkos, there's no need to do change a single setting in code blocks 17.12.

How to build a GTK3 application with msys2?

I had installed msys2 and mingw-gcc, gtk3 package.
pacman -S mingw-w64-i686-toolchain
pacman -S mingw-w64-i686-gtk3
Then I tried to build a test code.
// main.c
#include <stdio.h>
#include <gtk\gtk.h>
int main()
{
printf("hello, msys2!");
return 0;
}
but this test code wasn't build with error.
main.c:2:21: fatal error: gtk\gtk.h: No such file or directory
I checked gtk.h's location and fixed and rebuilded.
// #include <gtk\gtk.h> -> #include <gtk-3.0\gtk\gtk.h>
C:/msys32/mingw32/include/gtk-3.0/gtk/gtk.h:30:21: fatal error: gdk/gdk.h: No such file or directory
I guess there is my mistake i dont know.
go gtk3 tutorial site.
and read gcc option.
gcc `pkg-config --cflags gtk+-3.0` -o example-0 example-0.c `pkg-config --libs gtk+-3.0`
At the beginning (compiling with MSYS2) I have the same problem and procedure as suggested using the following command (or something like that):
gcc `pkg-config --cflags gtk+-3.0` hello.c -o hello `pkg-config --libs gtk+-3.0`
However the error message remained... So after some internet research I discovery that I have to type (in my case) the following command:
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/mingw32/lib/pkgconfig
or
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/mingw64/lib/pkgconfig
And them use the compile command previously quoted and then things start to running better and I was able to compile and run my programs.
The sad thing (one of many) is that I have to do this procedure every time I restart the MSYS2. I'm taking suggestions for not have to do it anymore :-)
And the other sad thing is in the fact that after reinstall a new version of MSYS2 (and Codeblocks in my computer) I still able to compile programs, however they are not running due an error with the zlib1.dll.
The message is
"The procedure entry point inflateReset2 could not be located in
the dynamic link library zlib1.dll"

Setting to compile with glib, dbus lib in Eclipse

I'm making a program with glib and dbus libs.
However I need to guide compile this on Eclipse.
There are errors for these lines..
"Unresolved inclusion"
include <dbus/dbus.h>
include <glib.h>
What kind of options and command needed for Tool Settings(Gcc c++ compiler/gcc c++ linker) on Eclipse?
Use package config to get the libs and cflags needed
pkg-config --libs glib-2.0 dbus-1
pkg-config --cflags glib-2.0 dbus-1
and put them into according places in the Eclipse UI.
That is a common error on eclipse, it uses the system path, but the system maybe uses a library handler like pkg-config, so normally eclipse displays a lot of missing includes, but the program builds correctly (if you set pkg-config on your makefiles), because is just only eclipse how can't find the headers.
to solve this, add /usr/include/glib-2.0/ to your project include path on eclipse
or install an addon to handle the includes like Pkg-config support for Eclipse CDT 0.8.0 this one

Eclipse not finding gcc?

I did a fresh install of my computer, I installed a new Eclipse and imported a program into my workspace. The program was working fine before but now I get this message when I try to compile
Program "gcc -std=gnu99" not found in PATH
I checked if gcc is on my PATH variable and it is
user#computer:~$ echo $PATH
/usr/local/bin:/usr/bin:/bin:/usr/local/games:/usr/games:/usr/local/cuda-5.5/bin
and
user#computer:~$ which gcc
/usr/bin/gcc
Any idea what the problem is?
It appears to be looking for an executable named "gcc -std=gnu99", which of course doesn't exist.
I don't know Eclipse very well, but presumably you have to specify the command name gcc and the argument(s) -std=gnu99 separately.
This question discusses setting gcc options in Eclipse.
From that and my own brief experiments, compiler options are set for each project. After selecting a project, follow this sequence of menus:
Project --> Properties -->C/C++ Build --> Settings --> GCC C compiler
In my installation, I have:
Command: gcc
All options: -O0 -g3 -Wall -c -fmessage-length=0
If you have "-std=gnu99" in the "Command" setting, delete it and add it to the "All options" setting.
This is for Eclipse 3.5.2 running on Debian; the menu hierarchy might be different on yours.
If that's not it, you might also want to check your environment variables:
$ env | grep gnu99

GCC C++ Linker section on FC13

I am trying to get OpenGL and Glut running on Eclipse Linux FC13.
After spending two days on it, I admit that help is needed. On FC13 Eclipse, I see
/usr/include/GL and /usr/include/SDL -- so the libs are there. I started Eclipse, and then tried to run a simple program on it, just like suggested here. However, two things were missing in those steps:
Callisto could not be installed --
nothing was found from the
repository
GCC C++ Linker is not found anywhere
for Eclipse 3.5.2.
When trying to run the program, I see this error:
Program does not exist
and sometimes
Binary not found
If I just run the "hello world" it works, but otherwise, those errors happen every time I try to include glut gl or sdl commands.
Here is an excerpt from the compiler error:
make all
g++ -O2 -g -Wall -fmessage-length=0 -c -o tw.o tw.cpp
tw.cpp: In function ‘void main_loop_function()’:
g++ -o tw tw.o
Yes, apparently the compiler is not able to see the glu, gl, sdl and glut libraries.
Some suggestion on how to fix?
You have to tell the compiler that your program uses additional libraries.
Use the -l argument
g++ -O2 -g -Wall -fmessage-length=0 -lglut -lGL -lGLU -lX11 -c -o tw.o tw.cpp
This should help against unsatisfied link errors.
You can set these in the properties of your Project.
Properties->c/c++ Build->Settings->Tool Settings->Linker
Check if the compiler is able to find the appropriate header files or not. If not, you are sure to get compiler errors. Try using the -I option to set the appropriate paths.
Once you've fixed that, check if there are any linker errors (undefined symbols/references or the sort). If you do: Try to set the library paths using the -L option and ask the compiler to link in the specific libraries by using the -l option. Note that the latter expects something like -lmath where in reality the library being linked in is actually called libmath.so or libmath.a (as the case may be).