The first three files are found by Windows using PATH, as they are in the mingw32/bin directory anyway. The last five copy commands for "Install Libraries:". After all this, the compilation happened successfully.Ħ. Still better to uninstall the "C:\MinGW" itself.ĥ. Only the "Program files (x86)" path should be retained in PATH environment variable.
If you had a previous MinGW installation, say in "C:\MinGW", the method here will install one more under "C:\Program files (x86)".
Next add the paths to the compiler and Cmake also in System Environment Variables under User variables, if they are not there. HOMEPATH = "\Users\yourUserName" or whichever is your home directoryģ. HOMEDRIVE = "c:" or whichever drive is Windows
System Environment Variables: You need to add the following using the windows "System Properties->Environment Variables" window. It gets installed as a desktop shortcut from where it will open its own command window.Ģ. This will get installed after you install "Git-2.26.2-64-bit.exe". The commands written here are for Git-Bash shell.
Was giving commands under cmd.exe windows command prompt. So am writing a few elaborations/corrections in the git tab under Compiling for "Windows 10 with MinGW" that were found.ġ. I tried to compile it under Win10 and was unsuccessful initially.Īfter trying for a while I could figure out and do a full compilation and run the code. The app is very small and code efficient. It has the Generator, Oscilloscope, Spectrum Analyzer as well as a setup to play out Audio and read it back to have a Frequency Response measurement. I have searched around for several Audio Oscilloscope programs on the net and this is one which ticks many measurement requirements.