1. Toolchain
Before compiling make sure you have all the tools installed.
- To install the dependencies, this guide will use Homebrew which has an installation guide on their project page.
- This project uses CMake to generate the makefiles. Install it with
brew install cmake
.
2. Install External Dependencies
brew install openssl pkgconfig
- Note
- Usually, you do not need pkgconfig. However, it seems that it throws errors about openssl without.
For voice support, additional dependencies are required:
brew install libsodium opus
3. Build Source Code
cmake -B ./build
cmake --build ./build -j8
Replace the number after -j
with a number suitable for your setup, usually the same as the number of cores on your machine. cmake
will fetch any dependencies that are required for you and ensure they are compiled alongside the library.
4. Install Globally
cd build
sudo make install
5. Installation to a Different Directory
If you want to install the library, its dependencies, and header files to a different directory, specify this directory when running cmake
:
cmake .. -DCMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX=/path/to/install
Then once the build is complete, run sudo make install
to install to the location you specified.
6. Using the Library
Once installed, you can make use of the library in standalone programs simply by including it and linking to it:
clang++ -std=c++17 -ldpp mydppbot.cpp -o dppbot
The important flags in this command-line are:
-std=c++17
- Required to compile the headers
-ldpp
- Link to libdpp.dylib
mydppbot.cpp
- Your source code
dppbot
- The name of the executable to make
- Note
- Compiling your bot with a raw `g++` command is not advised in any real project, and the example above should be used only as a test. From here, you should learn to create a bot in D++ by moving on to Building a Discord Bot Using CMake (UNIX) or if you have not yet created a token for your bot, Creating a Bot Token - If you are having trouble setting up CMake, you can try our template cmake bot project.
Have fun!