You signed in with another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You signed out in another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.You switched accounts on another tab or window. Reload to refresh your session.Dismiss alert
{{ message }}
Instantly share code, notes, and snippets.
raulqf
raulqf
Telecom Engineer, Software Developer, Digital Signal Processing, Computer Vision, Machine Learning, AI
Virutal environment is an useful utility for python to install packages locally and not globally so your system remains clean after installing multiples packages. It is recommended to avoid future conflicts between packages.
To install virtual environment you just have to type:
How to install Qt libraries on Linux from source code
How to install Qt on Linux from source code
One of the best option is to use the run package offered by Qt to install the libraries and its IDE (Qt Creator). Nevertheless However, when you want to compile it for a sever, where no GUI is required, you must be then interested in how to compile from source and discover some of the configuration options you have to disable some GUI modules among others and get lightest weight libraries.
First of all download the tar.xz file from Qt. You can also go to the archive and select the best that fulfill your requirement. Right now I am going on with the newest version up to the moment v5.9.3.
Create a directory and uncompress the downloaded file:
This is a brief receipt used for NVIDIA CUDA installation on a Ubuntu Linux Distro. All the steps can be found in the guide provided by NVIDIA but this gist contains some glue points to overcome problems during the installation.
The current installation was performed for an Ubuntu version 14.04.5 LTS, Trusty Tahr using a x86_64 architecture. You can get this information by typing in a consonle terminal:
$ uname -m && cat /etc/*release
Once you get that information we can find the NVIDIA Toolkit that supports our Linux Distro. Last version is NVIDIA CUDA Toolkit 8.0 ga2 although version 9 is already published but it does not give support for 14.04. To know what that information you must check Table 1. Native Linux Distribution Support
First, create a Git subfolder inside your Dropbox folder. Then you can share the individual projects inside that folder with whomever you want (or just use it for instant offsite backups).