Sorry Phil if my questions seem 'lame'. I should have explained that I only
installed Cygwin this morning so I'm by no means up to speed with the
concepts or terminology.
Anyway, I managed to arrange Windows so that it now starts X at boot up.
This means that I can use a (DOS) console window to navigate to the
appropriate directory, type 'HelloWorld' and my HelloWorld app launches
with X just running silently in the background. That's a lot slicker than
the procedure I was using a few hours ago. Thanks for the suggestion.
What's strange though is that I can't just double-click on the app's icon
and launch it. There's a (slim) chance that this could be a Windows problem
but I've never known any other Windows app that can be started from a
command line but can't be started by clicking its icon. Any ideas?
John
----- Original Message -----
From: "Phil Betts" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <cygwin-xfree@cygwin.com>
Sent: 18 August 2008 16:41
Subject: RE: Running a simple GUI app
John Emmas wrote on Monday, August 18, 2008 4:55 PM::
Hi there,
After installing Cygwin (under WinXP) I've got to the stage of
compiling a very simple "Hello World" app which just displays an
empty GTK dialog with the title "Hello World". To run the app I
(currently) have to start Cygwin (using its desktop icon), type
"startx" into the DOS terminal (which opens a second terminal
window), navigate to the folder containing my executable and finally
type "./HelloWorld". Obviously this is all a bit convoluted. Is
there a simpler way to launch my app - for example:-
a) Double clicking on an icon, or
b) Issuing some command (from a DOS terminal) that would launch the
app - but starting Cygwin and X invisibly.
Thanks,
John
First, there's no such concept as "starting Cygwin". Cygwin is just
a DLL. If you mean "start a bash session", there's no need to do
that just to run an X program.
You could* write a bash script along the lines of:
-------- /path/to/runyourprog -------
#!/bin/bash --login
checkx || startx
exec yourprogname
-------------------------------------
The --login should ensure that the environment is set up correctly.
Then you can create a shortcut with a target of:
C:\cygwin\bin\bash -c /path/to/runyourprog
* This is very much a lame Windows-user type of thing to be doing.
Xwin is a SERVER. It should not be started by running a client.
If you were to ask a linux mailing list for a way to switch runlevel
if someone tried to run your program without an X server, you would
rightly expect the electronic equivalent of howls of derision.
Why do you not just start X when you log on? If you'd rather not
start X every time you log on, you only need to start it the first
time you try to run an X program. Any properly written X program
(including yours) should tell the user if it cannot connect to the
X server, so if you get this message, you just need to run the
server - once, then try again.
Phil
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