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Monday, October 29, 2012

Windows 2000, XP, 2003, Vista(FOR WINDOWS BOOSTING)

Windows 2000, XP, 2003, Vista

Section contributed by Julio M. Merino Vidal
The following instructions apply to any Windows system based on Windows 2000, including Windows XP, Windows 2003 Server and Windows Vista. The paths shown below are taken from a Windows Vista machine; you will need to adjust them to match your system in case you are running an older version.
  1. First of all you need to have a copy of xsltproc for Windows. There are many ways to get this tool, but to keep things simple, use the binary packages made by Igor Zlatkovic. At the very least, you need to download the following packages: iconv, zlib, libxml2 and libxslt.
  2. Unpack all these packages in the same directory so that you get unique bin, include and lib directories within the hierarchy. These instructions use C:\Users\example\Documents\boost\xml as the root for all files.
  3. From the command line, go to the bin directory and launch xsltproc.exe to ensure it works. You should get usage information on screen.
  4. Download Docbook XML 4.2 and unpack it in the same directory used above. That is: C:\Users\example\Documents\boost\xml\docbook-xml.
  5. Download the latest Docbook XSL version and unpack it, again in the same directory used before. Be careful that you download the correct file, sometimes the 'looking for the latest version' link often links to another file. The name should be of the form docbook-xsl-1.nn.n.tar.bz2, with no suffix such as -ns.tar.bz2 or -doc.tar.bz2. To make things easier, rename the directory created during the extraction to docbook-xsl (bypassing the version name): C:\Users\example\Documents\boost\xml\docbook-xsl.
  6. Add the following to your user-config.jam file, which should live in your home directory (%HOMEDRIVE%%HOMEPATH%). You must already have it somewhere or otherwise you could not be building Boost (i.e. missing tools configuration).
using xsltproc
    : "C:/Users/example/Documents/boost/xml/bin/xsltproc.exe"
    ;

using boostbook
    : "C:/Users/example/Documents/boost/xml/docbook-xsl"
    : "C:/Users/example/Documents/boost/xml/docbook-xml"
    ;
The above steps are enough to get a functional BoostBook setup. Quickbook will be automatically built when needed. If you want to avoid these rebuilds:
  1. Go to Quickbook's source directory (BOOST_ROOT\tools\quickbook).
  2. Build the utility by issuing bjam.
  3. Copy the resulting quickbook.exe binary (located at BOOST_ROOT\dist\bin) to a safe place. Following our previous example, you can install it into: C:\Users\example\Documents\boost\xml\bin.
  4. Add the following to your user-config.jam file:
    using quickbook
        : "C:/Users/example/Documents/boost/xml/bin/quickbook.exe"
        ;
     

Mac OS X, Snow Leopard (or later) FOR MAC BOOS

Mac OS X, Snow Leopard (or later)

Section contributed by Julio M. Merino Vidal
The text below assumes you want to install all the necessary utilities in a system-wide location, allowing any user in the machine to have access to them. Therefore, all files will be put in the /usr/local hierarchy. If you do not want this, you can choose any other prefix such as ~/Applications for a single-user installation.
Snow Leopard comes with xsltproc and all related libraries preinstalled, so you do not need to take any extra steps to set them up. It is probable that future versions will include them too, but these instructions may not apply to older versions.
To get started:
  1. Download Docbook XML 4.2 and unpack it inside /usr/local/share/xml/docbook/4.2.
  2. Download the latest Docbook XSL version and unpack it. Be careful that you download the correct file, sometimes the 'looking for the latest version' link often links to another file. The name should be of the form docbook-xsl-1.nn.n.tar.bz2, with no suffix such as -ns.tar.bz2 or -doc.tar.bz2. Put the results in /usr/local/share/xsl/docbook, thus effectively removing the version number from the directory name (for simplicity).
  3. Add the following to your user-config.jam file, which should live in your home directory (/Users/<your_username>). You must already have it somewhere or otherwise you could not be building Boost (i.e. missing tools configuration).
    using xsltproc ;
    
    using boostbook
        : "/usr/local/share/xsl/docbook"
        : "/usr/local/share/xml/docbook/4.2"
        ;
     
The above steps are enough to get a functional BoostBook setup. Quickbook will be automatically built when needed. If you want to avoid these rebuilds and install a system-wide Quickbook instead:
  1. Go to Quickbook's source directory (BOOST_ROOT/tools/quickbook).
  2. Build the utility by issuing bjam.
  3. Copy the resulting quickbook binary (located at BOOST_ROOT/dist/bin) to a safe place. Following our previous example, you can install it into: /usr/local/bin.
  4. Add the following to your user-config.jam file:
    using quickbook
        : "/usr/local/bin/quickbook" ;
        ;
     
Additionally, if you need to build documentation that uses Doxygen, you will need to install it too:
  1. Go to the downloads section and get the disk image (dmg file) for Mac OS X.
  2. Open the disk image and drag the Doxygen application to your Applications folder to install it.
  3. Add the following to your user-config.jam file:
    using doxygen
        : /Applications/Doxygen.app/Contents/Resources/doxygen
        ;
     

Sunday, October 28, 2012

MAC OS X,using macports (mac boosting)

Mac OS X, using macports

First install the libxslt, docbook-xsl and docbook-xml-4.2 packages:
sudo port install libxslt docbook-xsl docbook-xml-4.2
Next, we need to configure Boost Build to compile BoostBook files. Add the following to your user-config.jam file, which should be in your home directory. If you don't have one, create a file containing this text. For more information on setting up user-config.jam, see the Boost Build documentation.
using xsltproc
    : /opt/local/bin/xsltproc
    ;

using boostbook
    : /opt/local/share/xsl/docbook-xsl/
    : /opt/local/share/xml/docbook/4.2
    ;
The above steps are enough to get a functional BoostBook setup. Quickbook will be automatically built when needed. If you want to avoid these rebuilds:
  1. Go to Quickbook's source directory (BOOST_ROOT/tools/quickbook).
  2. Build the utility by issuing bjam.
  3. Copy the resulting quickbook binary (located at BOOST_ROOT/dist/bin) to a safe place. The traditional location is /usr/local/bin.
  4. Add the following to your user-config.jam file, using the full path of the quickbook executable:
    using quickbook
        : /usr/local/bin/quickbook
        ;
     
If you need to build documentation that uses Doxygen, you will need to install it as well:
sudo port install doxygen
And then add to your user-config.jam:
using doxygen ;

new micromax funbook

Tablet with no support for GSM voice communication.
General         2G Network                          N/A
SIM                          No
Announced                          2012, April
Status                         Available. Released 2012, April
Body         Dimensions                           192 x 122 x -
        Weight -
Display        Type                            TFT capacitive touchscreen
   Size                            480 x 800 pixels, 7.0 inches (~133 ppi pixel density)
   Multitouch                            Yes
Sound        Alert types                   N/A
       Loudspeaker Yes
       3.5mm jack Yes
Memory     Card slot                                  microSD, up to 32 GB
    Internal                                 4 GB, 512 MB RAM
Data         GPRS   No
        EDGE   No
        WLAN                          Wi-Fi 802.11 b/g
       Bluetooth  
         USB Yes, miniUSB v2.0
Camera     Primary                       No
    Video  
     Secondary  Yes, VGA
Features    OS         Android OS, v4.0.3 (Ice Cream Sandwich)
   CPU         1.22 GHz Cortex-A8
   GPU                                 Mali-400MP
   Sensors         Accelerometer, gyro
   Messaging         Email, IM, RSS
   Browser         HTML
   Radio No
   GPS No
   Java Yes, via Java MIDP emulator
   Colors Suave silver, Brilliant black
 - HDMI port
- MP3/WAV/WMA/AAC player
- MP4/H.263 player
- Organizer
- Image editor
- Document viewer
- Google Search, Maps, Gmail,
YouTube, Calendar, Google Talk, Picasa integration
- Voice memo/dial
- Predictive text input
Battery   Standard battery, Li-Ion 2800 mAh
Stand-by
Talk time Up to 5 h

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