From 896eb14063b7cd19cb103bd1c48d4a0781bf25a4 Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: Jaakko Keränen Date: Sun, 13 Sep 2020 17:17:52 +0300 Subject: Updated README --- README.md | 4 ++-- 1 file changed, 2 insertions(+), 2 deletions(-) diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index c1b9aa7d..83e9a6e9 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -25,13 +25,13 @@ Prebuilt binaries for Windows and macOS can be found in [Releases][rel]. This is how to build Lagrange in a Unix-like environment. The required tools are a C11 compiler (e.g., Clang or GCC), CMake and `pkg-config`. 1. Download and extract a source tarball from [Releases][rel]. (If you just clone this Git repository, [the_Foundation][tf] is expected to be already available on the system.) -2. Check that you have the dependencies installed: SDL2, OpenSSL, libpcre, zlib, libunistring. For example, on Homebrew this would do the trick: ```brew install sdl2 openssl@1.1 pcre libunistring``` Or on Ubuntu: ```sudo apt install libsdl2-dev libssl-dev libpcre3-dev zlib1g-dev libunistring-dev``` +2. Check that you have the dependencies installed: SDL2, OpenSSL, libpcre, zlib, libunistring. For example, on macOS this would do the trick (using Homebrew): ```brew install sdl2 openssl@1.1 pcre libunistring``` Or on Ubuntu: ```sudo apt install libsdl2-dev libssl-dev libpcre3-dev zlib1g-dev libunistring-dev``` 3. Create a build directory. 4. In your empty build directory, run CMake: ```cmake {path_of_lagrange_sources}``` 5. Built it: ```cmake --build .``` 6. Now you can run `lagrange`, `lagrange.exe`, or `Lagrange.app`. -## Installing to a directory +### Installing to a directory To install to "/dest/path": -- cgit v1.2.3