images

Adam Goode adam at spicenitz.org
Tue May 10 21:15:10 EDT 2011


Hi Elena,

There is but 1 source code package. It is used to create both the
Windows and Linux binary files for 32- and 64-bit.

I do not personally build Windows binaries regularly, but there are
others on this list that do.


Adam


On Tue, May 10, 2011 at 14:05, Villalon, Elena <villalel at umdnj.edu> wrote:
> Hello Adam, I believe that the C source code that is downloadable from the website is for Linux; somebody in my group said that it has function calls for the Linux environmnet.  Can we get the Windows C-language source code version of the OpenSlide so we can generate windows 64 and 32 bits libraries?. Cheers
> Elena
>
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: Adam Goode [mailto:adam at spicenitz.org]
> Sent: Monday, May 09, 2011 9:02 PM
> To: Villalon, Elena
> Cc: openslide-users at lists.andrew.cmu.edu
> Subject: Re: images
>
> Yes, OpenSlide was designed to read these images on Linux. Windows
> support only came later. We do not rely on any platform-specific
> libraries or services, so functionality should be identical across
> platforms.
>
>
> Adam
>
>
> On Mon, May 9, 2011 at 09:56, Villalon, Elena <villalel at umdnj.edu> wrote:
>> Hello, I was wandering if the images that openslide analyzes (i.e., tif,
>> vms, vmu, svs, mrxs) are all cross-platform and the software can read them
>> in either Linux or Windows.  Somebody here in my group is telling me that
>> the images they have are Windows proprietary but I thought that all images
>> are cross-platform. Is there any reason the same images could be read with
>> Linux or Unix platform. Elena
>>
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> openslide-users mailing list
>> openslide-users at lists.andrew.cmu.edu
>> https://lists.andrew.cmu.edu/mailman/listinfo/openslide-users
>>
>>
>


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