Download the application bundle (gmt-5.x.x-darwin-x8664.dmg) and drag GMT-5.x.x.app to any folder. This bundle includes a self contained GMT installation. GMT-5.x.x.app opens a terminal from which you can invoke GMT programs and scripts. If you like, you can add the GMT programs contained in the application bundle to your search path for. Start date: Feb 11, 2017 PYGMT: A PYTHON INTERFACE FOR THE GENERIC MAPPING TOOLS We are bringing the power of GMT to Python through a wrapper library that relies on the GMT C API. An extremely simple extension that adds a dialog for GMT Time in your status bar. Link to the font used in the screen shot in the website link. Enter to Search. My Profile Logout.
- *NIX
- Installing from package managers
- Building GMT from source
- Windows
- Runtime dependencies
- Build dependencies
- Building GMT5.2dev on Windows
This is a quick guide through the build process using CMake. Refer to the file README.CMake in the source directory for more details.
If you are accustomed to the GNU autotools build chain the CMake transition guide might be helpful.
Package maintainers note packaging recommendations.
Build and runtime dependencies¶
Install:- CMake (>=2.8.5)
- netCDF (>=4.0, netCDF-4/HDF5 support mandatory)
- libcurl [for GMT >= 5.4]
- PCRE (Regular expression support for gmt convert and -e)
Alternatively, for GMT >= 5.4.4, or the current SVN version, PCRE2 can be used. - GDAL (Ability to read and write numerous grid and image formats)
- FFTW Single-precision (Fast FFTs [not needed under OS X])
- LAPACK (Fast matrix inversion [not needed under OS X])
- BLAS (Fast matrix multiplications [not needed underr OS X])
- Sphinx (1.4.x or younger)
Installing from package managers¶
Ubuntu/Debian¶
Install the development dependencies with
and follow the instructions in the Building GMT section.
and follow the instructions in the Building GMT section.
- To enable testing you need GraphicsMagick:
- To build the documentation you need more packages still:
RHEL, CentOS, Fedora¶
GMT's dependencies are available from Extra Packages for Enterprise Linux. For RHEL and CentOS you can add this repository by telling yum:
You then need to install at least the packages cmake, netcdf-devel and gdal-devel, e.g.:
You then need to install at least the packages cmake, netcdf-devel and gdal-devel, e.g.:
- To enable testing you need GraphicsMagick:
MacOSX with macports.¶
You need to install Apple's Xcode Developer Tools, found at the Apple Developer Connection site, on your Mac OS X installation CDs/DVD, or in the Mac App Store. Ensure that the optional components for command line development are installed ('Command Line Tools', 'Command Line Support', or 'UNIX Development').
- Get and install dependent programs and libraries with macports:
Optionally also install the GDAL, FFTW (single-precision) and PCRE packages (LAPACK and BLAS are provided via the Accelerate Framework):
- To enable testing you need GraphicsMagick:
- To build the documentation you need more packages still (This assumes Python 2.7; change 27 to some other version if different):
- If you want to get the coastline files conveniently through macports, use also:
- Finally, to build releases, also get:
MacOSX with Fink.¶
You need to install Apple's Xcode Developer Tools, found at the Apple Developer Connection site, on your Mac OS X installation CDs/DVD, or in the Mac App Store. Ensure that the optional components for command line development are installed ('Command Line Tools', 'Command Line Support', or 'UNIX Development').
- Get and install dependent programs and libraries with Fink:
- To enable testing you need GraphicsMagick:
- To build the documentation you need more packages still (This assumes Python 2.7; change 27 to some other version if different):
- If you want to get the coastline files conveniently through Fink, use also:
Cygwin¶
These are the steps to get a working system (if you know what you are doing you can take shortcuts):
- Make a directory for storing Cygwin-related tarballs and the setup program; call it C:CygwinFiles.
- Download startup.exe from http://www.cygwin.com and save to C:CygwinFiles.
- Run startup.exe (or startup-x86_64.exe for 64-bit Windows). Select your C:CygwinFiles for storage of downloads and create C:Cygwin[32|64] for where to install [under no circumstance should you pick a path that has a space in it!]. accept all defaults for now. This is the basic default Cygwin installation.
- Run startup.exe again, and this time use the search field to add these packages (unfortunately, while a gdal 2.0 package is available, it is built with an obsolete proj4 library and is thus messed up [OCt 26, 2016: This may change when then fix it]. Workaround is to not build with gdal or to build your own gdal library; for GMT 4 you also need the autoconf package):
- Make sure you accept any dependencies that are found, then finish the install.
- Set the environmental parameter HDF5_DISABLE_VERSION_CHECK=2.
Now you can follow the 'Building GMT from source' instructions.
Building GMT from source¶
- Get the latest GMT source code from Github
- Get GSHHG (coastlines, rivers, and political boundaries; filename: gshhg-gmt-x.x.x.tar.gz) from the download page or ftp://ftp.soest.hawaii.edu/gshhg and extract the files.
- Get DCW (country polygons; filename: dcw-gmt-x.x.x.tar.gz) from the download page or ftp://ftp.soest.hawaii.edu/dcw and extract the files.
- In the source tree copy cmake/ConfigUserTemplate.cmake to cmake/ConfigUser.cmake and edit the file according to your demands. This is an example:
- Build and install GMT (note the two periods at the end of the cmake command that indicates the parent directory):
Generate Documentation (optional)¶
You need to install the Sphinx documentation builder and LaTeX (e.g., TeX Live) to generate manual pages, HTML, and PDF documentation:
The documentation is also available online and as a platform independent gmt-5.x.x-doc.tar.gz package that you can install along with GMT.
The documentation is also available online and as a platform independent gmt-5.x.x-doc.tar.gz package that you can install along with GMT.
You can choose to install documentation files from an external location instead of generating the manuals from the sources. This is convenient if Sphinx and/or LaTeX are not available. Set GMT_INSTALL_EXTERNAL_DOC in cmake/ConfigUser.cmake.
Packaging with CPack (optional)¶
If you just want to create a GMT package you do not need to make install.
CPack supports stand-alone TGZ and TBZ2 archives on *NIX, and on MacOSX CPack can also create application bundles. To include the GSHHG and DCW data you must set both COPY_GSHHG and COPY_DCW to true. After building GMT run:
Dependency walking takes a long time so be patient. You can save some time if you are only interested in one of the package options. Invoke CPack instead:
Source packages can be build as follows:
Runtime dependencies¶
Gmt For Maryland
Ghostscript¶
Install a recent Ghostscript version.
Build dependencies¶
Microsoft Windows SDK >= v7.1¶
You don't need Visual Studio 2010. Be aware, that Visual Studio 2010 Express cannot compile x64 binaries. You need the Windows SDK for that.
Download and install Microsofts free SDK for Windows, e.g., v7.1
![Gmt For The Mac Gmt For The Mac](/uploads/1/3/4/7/134770358/731909364.jpg)
CMake¶
Install CMake and select option to add CMake to the system PATH.
Subversion¶
You need to install Subversion in order to fetch the sources. Make sure svn is in the PATH. A Windows version is available here
netCDF¶
Compiling netCDF from scratch on Windows is not an easy task since you need a lot of dependencies. You could either install a prepackaged development build from http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/software/netcdf/docs/winbin.html. For instance netCDF4.3.3.1-NC4-64.exe, and hope that it works. If it doesn't we suggest you build netCDF yourself from the CMake bundled sources of netCDF from source. See http://www.unidata.ucar.edu/software/netcdf/docs/getting_and_building_netcdf.html#netCDF-CMake
PCRE (optional)¶
In the following examples we assume that dependent libraries are installed in sudirectories of z:software any other directory is fine though.
Get PCRE from http://www.pcre.org/ and extract pcre-8.30.zip in z:softwaresrcpcre-8.30
Transmit for mac. Its interface has echoes of regular FTP software, yet it has been updated to make it look just like the OS X Finder.
- Open the SDK Command Prompt:
- Check if you can run pcregrep from the command prompt.
GDAL (optional, but a must have)¶
We assume that you already installed HDF4, HDF5, cURL, netCDF to z:software.
Now that all dependent libraries are available we can proceed with GDAL. In the following we assume that the target install directory for GDAL is z:software as well.
- Get the GDAL sources from http://trac.osgeo.org/gdal/wiki/DownloadSource
- Extract gdal190.zip (or the latest version) in z:softwaresrcgdal-1.9.0
- Create a file z:softwaresrcgdal-1.9.0nmake.local with the following content:
- Open Windows SDK Command Prompt
- Make sure z:softwarebin is in the PATH and type ogr2ogr. It should greet you with usage information if everything is fine.
NSIS (optional)¶
You also need to install NSIS (Nullsoft Scriptable Install System) if you want to bundle GMT with all dependent DLLs and create a Windows intaller. Download from http://nsis.sourceforge.net/
Building GMT on Windows¶
Finally we are ready to compile GMT.
- Get the latest GMT source code from Github
- Get GSHHG (coastlines, rivers, and political boundaries; filename: gshhg-gmt-x.x.x.tar.gz) from the download page or ftp://ftp.soest.hawaii.edu/gshhg
- Get DCW (country polygons; filename: dcw-gmt-x.x.x.tar.gz) from the download page or ftp://ftp.soest.hawaii.edu/dcw
- In the source tree copy cmake/ConfigUserTemplate.cmake to cmake/ConfigUser.cmake and edit the file according to your demands. This is an example:
- Open Windows SDK Command Prompt
- Typing gmt should get you with a short message. You need to set your PATH to the directory specified in CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX:
Congratulations you managed to install GMT on your machine!
Building GMT5.2dev on Windows¶
To build the 5.2 branch you need at least VS2013. It is also known to work with the free VS2015 Community Version
- Get GMT from source:branches/5.2.0
- proceed as above but using a command window where the VS environment variables have been set.
Packaging with NSIS (optional)¶
If you just want to create a GMT package you do not need to nmake install.
CPack supports stand-alone ZIP archives and NSIS installers on Windows. To include the GSHHG and DCW data you must set both COPY_GSHHG and COPY_DCW to true. After building GMT run:
Mp250 driver for mac.
Mp250 driver for mac.
Gmt For The Macula
This will create both a ZIP archive and NSIS installer. If there are no issues then you will obtain three files, e.g.:
GMT-5.1.2-win64-Documentation.zip
GMT-5.1.2-win64-Runtime.zip
GMT-5.1.2-win64.exe
GMT-5.1.2-win64-Documentation.zip
GMT-5.1.2-win64-Runtime.zip
GMT-5.1.2-win64.exe
Dependency walking takes a long time so be patient. You can save some time if you are only interested in one of the two package options. Invoke CPack instead:
The software packages are self contained and already include all dependent DLLs (netCDF, GDAL, PCRE, ..).
Users compiling with Windows SDK or Visual Studio Express note that the VC/Redist folder is missing. CMake will issue a warning. You then have to manually edit CMAKE_INSTALL_SYSTEM_RUNTIME_LIBS in cmake/ConfigUser.cmake.
Microsoft has recently announced a new Office for Mac Insider build, and this time the focus is on the Outlook email client.
Office version 16.43 (20093000) comes with Outlook features that Microsoft announced only a few days ago, including an improved UX to align with Apple’s new macOS Big Sur.
But at the same time, the update also includes Fluent icons, thus making Outlook overall feel more modern on Apple devices.
“The new Outlook for Mac gets an update to the user experience to align better with the UX changes within MacOS Big Sur. Crafted specifically for the Mac, you will now find rounded corners in the buttons, message list, and conversation pane that are influenced by Big Sur. We have also incorporated friendly and modern Fluent icons that establish a consistent experience across our products and services,” Microsoft explains.
More natural searching
This update also enables the Natural Language Search, which allows users to search in Office without the need for specific keywords. In other words, you can use the search box just like you’d ask a question, and Office will then try to determine what you’re actually looking for and provide you with accurate results.
Professional audio experience with VR headset and finest pictures. 3. Enhance the video quality to experience HDR TV and 4K videos. 1. 2. Media hd player for mac.
Microsoft is also introducing Saved Search in this update, also known as Smart Folders.
“A Saved Search, also known as a smart folder or a search folder, is a virtual folder that dynamically displays a set of search results. For example, you could create a search to find all the items in the Manager category. This search can be saved as a Saved Search so that you can use these search criteria later without having to manually re-create the search,” the company explains.
All these improvements are currently part of the latest Office build for the Fast ring, and they should go live for production devices when the testing phase is complete.