$Id$ Building libcaca o Run configure then make. Useful configure flags are: --enable-ncurses: support for the ncurses library --enable-slang: support for the SLang library --enable-conio: support for MS-DOS conio.h --enable-x11: support for native X11 rendering --disable-imlib2: remove Imlib2 support in cacaview o Cross-compilation examples: ./configure --disable-imlib2 --host=i386-pc-msdosdjgpp ./configure --disable-imlib2 --host=i586-mingw32msvc Using libcaca o Look into the examples/ directory for simple source code examples. o Compiling a libcaca program is fairly simple: gcc -c foobar.c -o foobar.o `caca-config --cflags` gcc foobar.o -o foobar `caca-config --libs` o If you are writing a shared object that uses libcaca, either a dynamically loadable plug-in or a shared library, you should use the `--plugin-libs' flag for libcaca: gcc -fPIC -c libfoo.c -o libfoo.o `caca-config --cflags` gcc -shared libfoo.o -o libfoo.so `caca-config --plugin-libs` Binary packages o As the API is not stable yet, everyone should statically link libcaca with their programs or libraries. DO NOT DISTRIBUTE SHARED VERSIONS OF LIBCACA.