Here is the line I used. After finish (approximately 10 minutes) I got
near minus 700 MB hard drive. After I deleted unneeded "build" dir,
I've got only new "stage" dir with size near 388 mb (contains debug
and release multithreaded libraries versions).
bjam --build-type=minimal --build-dir=./builddir --without-wave
--without-math --without-python --without-graph_parallel stage
Notice, boost-wave and boost-math take really much disk space and
compilation time.
2009/9/9 Boost lzw
Hi there,
I have a similar question. I manually built boost 1.39 for MS Visual Studio 2008 Prof according to the following link: http://dave-programming.blogspot.com/2008/02/how-to-build-boost-1341-with-vi...
The build-up file folder took up to 9 GB. Now before manually building 1.40, what should I do with the previous version (1.39) on my machine? It seems there is nothing in the control panel->add and remove program for boost 1.39. I guess there is no way to remove 1.39 from the control panel. Should I simply delete 1.39 file folders before building the 1.40? Does the same building procedure for 1.39 (described in the above link) apply to manually building 1.40 as well? Thanks in advance.
Cheers, Robert
On Tue, Sep 8, 2009 at 5:09 PM, Roman Shmelev
wrote: I suggest you manually building Boost from sources. It is really not hard. Sorry for "offtopic"
Hi! I'm not sure how and when the windows installer for Boost 1.40 is planned. Where can I find the informations about that? Will it be available soon? I'm waiting for this installer before updating my Boost version. Thanks for you time. Joël Lamotte.
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