Coming from PHP, this is my first experience with C/C++ (so go easy on me). I'm following this tutorial to write a simple script using the FreeType library. The following compiles just fine:
#include <ft2build.h>
#include FT_FREETYPE_H
main() {
FT_Library library;
FT_Face face;
}
This tells me that the FreeType library is readily available to the compiler. However, things break once I try to use any methods. For example, take the following script:
#include <ft2build.h>
#include FT_FREETYPE_H
main() {
int error;
FT_Library library;
error = FT_Init_FreeType(&library);
if (error) {}
FT_Face face;
error = FT_New_Face(library, "/usr/share/fonts/truetype/arial.ttf", 0, &face);
if (error == FT_Err_Unknown_File_Format) {
printf("Font format is unsupported");
} else if (error) {
prinft("Font file is missing or corrupted");
}
}
This script produces the following error upon compiling:
#gcc render.c -I/usr/include/freetype2
/tmp/cc95255i.o: In function `main':
render.c:(.text+0x10): undefined reference to `FT_Init_FreeType'
render.c:(.text+0x30): undefined reference to `FT_New_Face'
collect2: ld returned 1 exit status
Any ideas?
Those are link errors. If they include a Makefile with the demo you are better off using that. Otherwise, you need to add -L and -l options to your compile command line so the compiler (actually the linker, which gets invoked by the compiler behind the scene) knows where to find the FreeType library.
The -L option gives the path to where the code for the library exists. For example
-L/usr/local/lib
And the -l option gives the name of the library. The library named with the -l option is specified in a shortened form, that is you leave off the "lib" in the front and the ".a" in the back. So for example, if the FreeType library was stored in file libfreetype.a , it would show in the -l option as
-lfreetype
e.g.:
gcc render.c -I/usr/include/freetype2 -L/usr/local/lib -lfreetype