I wanted to know whether I can work on images using Visual C++ without using OpenCV? I'm using Visual Studio 2012 Express on Windows 7 (32-bit system).
Thanks in advance!
Related
I have an Xamarin ios class library that I want to .Net Embedding to 'embed' for use by an Xcode Objective-C app
from the docs
Requirements
To use .NET Embedding with Objective-C, you'll need a Mac running:
macOS 10.12 (Sierra) or later
Xcode 8.3.2 or later
Mono 5.0
You can install Visual Studio for Mac to edit and compile your C#
code.
Note
Earlier versions of macOS, Xcode, and Mono might work, but are
untested and unsupported
Code generation can be done on Windows, but it is only possible to compile it on a Mac computer where Xcode is installed
Yes, embeddinator 4000 works in Windows 10 with Visual Studio 2019.
I have generated .aar for Android + Java.
However, there are many limitations of the generated aar.
e.g. functions that use non-primitive types get ignored and you do not have those in generated aar etc.
I excitedly installed Visual Studio Express 2012 for Windows Desktop on my fresh Windows 8 installation a couple days ago. I opened it and quickly found, to my dismay, that there is no native support for a C++ Windows Forms Application.
This is the correct guide that worked for me.
http://www.gamedev.net/blog/909/entry-2254695-native-only-apps-with-vs-express-
for-win8/
It is a hack and it's not the "proper" experience you'd expect or be used to.
I'd recommend getting 2010 express
Looking into more it seems like MS has a Visual studio 2012 for desktop for windows 8
http://blogs.msdn.com/b/visualstudio/archive/2012/06/08/visual-studio-express-2012-for-windows-desktop.aspx
I have to develop something in Linux(CentOS 6.5) Environment using C or C++ language with many of libraries for linux.
As you know, CentOS is not GUI. So, I want to use Microsoft Visual Studio for my work. It's OK even if use just VS as the Editor.
I mean that I like the features of IDE visual studio(intellisense, debugger, and so on).
I have Visual Studio 2008, 2010, 2013 Professional.
yes you can, in fact, if you have setup a VM machine, you can even directly include the C++ include library of Linux (However, this only works for write code, not work with compiling). You could also setup CYGWIN or MINGW for referencing the header of Linux platform.
In fact, for myself, I switched to QtCreator as a cross platform C++ IDE, it also has auto-complete and debug features.
I have developed Visual C++ 2008 code that runs in Windows. I have made it cross platform also so that it runs under Linux.
I am greatly concerned about distributing source code and even just libraries that Linux users can link to.
I have used CMake and Code::Blocks (only in Linux) but it was still developed using Visual Studio 2008 for most development.
The license looked similar for the professional version and the express version. Let me know if binaries can be released to run under Linux and also if it is okay to open source the entire project. I am pretty far into this project. Maybe it should have been done entirely in Linux.
I am also interested to jump to another Windows compiler such as MinGW in addition because of the Visual Studio licensing restrictions. Is this the path that cross platform programs are usually created or can they be created primarily with the professional or express Visual Studio compilers?
Disclaimer: I am a total beginner to Visual Basic but code a bit in python and Drupal
I need to compile this C++ app (http://sourceforge.net/scm/?type=git&group_id=227253). I succesfully cloned from git, but how do I compile it (get the .exe) in Visual Basic 2008 or 2010 Express?
I have tried this:
1. Open Visual Basic 2008 Express, File, New, Windows Form Application (naive assumption, which should I choose?)
2. Dragged the contents of the git clone into the Solution Explorer Window (which Adds files)
3. Click Build menu
After that I'm lost. Any help is appreciated! This project uses cmake if that helps.
You need Visual C++, not Visual Basic. They are separate languages.
You cannot compile a C++ program in Visual Basic 2008 Express.
You must download Visual C++. Or purchase Visual Studio 2010 Pro (which includes all of VB, C++, C# and the web tools).
If you've got the bandwidth, I'd encourage you to get this .iso:
http://www.microsoft.com/visualstudio/en-us/products/2010-editions/express-iso
If you're interested in the "bleeding edge", MSVS 2011 beta is available here:
http://www.microsoft.com/visualstudio/11/en-us/downloads
Otherwise, if you just want to compile some C+ code on a Microsoft Visual Studio compiler, get this:
http://www.microsoft.com/visualstudio/en-us/products/2010-editions/visual-cpp-express