You can not select more than 25 topics Topics must start with a letter or number, can include dashes ('-') and can be up to 35 characters long.
dlib/README.txt

36 lines
1.7 KiB

If you are reading this file then you must have downloaded dlib via the
mercurial repository. If you are new to dlib then go read the introduction
and how to compile pages at http://dlib.net/intro.html and http://dlib.net/compile.html.
If you are planning on contributing code then also read the contribution
instructions at http://dlib.net/howto_contribute.html.
COMPILING DLIB EXAMPLE PROGRAMS
Go into the examples folder and type:
mkdir build; cd build; cmake .. ; cmake --build .
That will build all the examples. Note that there is nothing to install
when using dlib. It's just a folder of source files. Sometimes people
tell me dlib should be compiled and installed as some kind of shared
library, however, they are wrong. Please read this http://dlib.net/howto_contribute.html#9
before starting this argument again.
RUNNING THE UNIT TEST SUITE
Type the following to compile and run the dlib unit test suite (it takes a while):
cd dlib/test; mkdir build; cd build; cmake ..; cmake --build . --config Release; ./test --runall
Note that on windows your compiler might put the test executable in a subfolder called
Release. If that's the case then you have to go to that folder before running the test.
DOCUMENTATION
The mercurial repository doesn't contain finished documentation. The stuff in
the docs folder is just a bunch of scripts and xml files used to generate the
documentation. There is a readme in docs/README.txt which discusses how to do
this. However, unless you are trying to modify the documentation, you should
just download a copy from http://dlib.net. That would probably be easier than
setting up your environment to generate the documentation yourself.