| 1 | /** | 
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| 2 | \page getstart How to start using LEMON | 
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| 3 |  | 
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| 4 | In this page we detail how to start using LEMON, from downloading it to | 
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| 5 | your computer, through the steps of installation, to showing a simple | 
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| 6 | "Hello World" type program that already uses LEMON. We assume that you | 
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| 7 | have a basic knowledge of your operating system and \c C++ programming | 
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| 8 | language. The procedure is pretty straightforward, but if you have any | 
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| 9 | difficulties don't hesitate to | 
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| 10 | <a href="http://lemon.cs.elte.hu/mailinglists.html">ask</a>. | 
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| 11 |  | 
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| 12 |  | 
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| 13 | \section requirementsLEMON Hardware and software requirements | 
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| 14 |  | 
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| 15 | In LEMON we use C++ templates heavily, thus compilation takes a | 
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| 16 | considerable amount of time and memory. So some decent box would be | 
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| 17 | advantageous. But otherwise there are no special hardware requirements. | 
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| 18 |  | 
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| 19 | You will need a recent C++ compiler. Our primary target is the GNU C++ | 
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| 20 | Compiler (g++), from version 3.3 upwards. We also checked the Intel C++ | 
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| 21 | Compiler (icc). Microsoft Visual C++ .NET 2003 was also reported to | 
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| 22 | work (but not the earlier versions). If you want to develop with LEMON | 
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| 23 | under Windows you could consider using Cygwin. | 
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| 24 |  | 
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| 25 | In this description we will suppose a Linux environment and GNU C++ Compiler. | 
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| 26 |  | 
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| 27 |  | 
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| 28 | \subsection requirementsLP LP solver requirements | 
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| 29 |  | 
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| 30 | The LEMON LP solver interface can use the GLPK (GNU Linear Programming Kit) | 
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| 31 | and CPLEX solvers (was tested with CPLEX 7.5). If you want to use it you will | 
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| 32 | need at least one of these. See \ref configureFlags how to enable these at | 
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| 33 | compile time. | 
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| 34 |  | 
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| 35 |  | 
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| 36 | \subsection requirementsGUI GUI requirements | 
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| 37 |  | 
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| 38 | To compile the graphical graph editor you will need libgnomecanvasmm | 
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| 39 | (2.6.0 or newer). See \ref configureFlags how to enable it. | 
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| 40 |  | 
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| 41 |  | 
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| 42 | \section downloadLEMON How to download LEMON | 
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| 43 |  | 
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| 44 | You can download LEMON from the LEMON web site: | 
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| 45 | http://lemon.cs.elte.hu/download.html . | 
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| 46 | There you will find released versions in form of <tt>.tar.gz</tt> files. | 
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| 47 | If you want a developer version (for example you want to contribute in | 
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| 48 | developing the library LEMON) then you might want to use our Subversion | 
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| 49 | repository. This case is not detailed here, so from now on we suppose that | 
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| 50 | you downloaded a tar.gz file. | 
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| 51 |  | 
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| 52 |  | 
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| 53 | \section installLEMON How to install LEMON | 
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| 54 |  | 
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| 55 | In order to install LEMON you have to do the following steps. | 
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| 56 |  | 
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| 57 | Download the tarball (named <tt>lemon-x.y.z.tar.gz</tt> where \c x,\c y | 
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| 58 | and \c z are numbers indicating the version of the library: in our example | 
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| 59 | we will have <tt>lemon-0.3.1.tar.gz</tt>) and issue the following | 
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| 60 | commands: | 
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| 61 |  | 
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| 62 | \verbatim | 
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| 63 | tar xvzf lemon-0.3.1.tar.gz | 
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| 64 | cd lemon-0.3.1 | 
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| 65 | ./configure | 
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| 66 | make | 
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| 67 | make check   #(This is optional, but recommended. It runs a bunch of tests.) | 
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| 68 | make install | 
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| 69 | \endverbatim | 
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| 70 |  | 
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| 71 | These commands install LEMON under \c /usr/local (you will | 
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| 72 | need root privileges to be able to install to that | 
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| 73 | directory). If you want to install it to some other place, then | 
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| 74 | pass the \c --prefix=DIRECTORY flag to \c ./configure, for example: | 
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| 75 |  | 
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| 76 | \verbatim | 
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| 77 | ./configure --prefix=/home/user1/lemon | 
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| 78 | \endverbatim | 
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| 79 |  | 
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| 80 | In what follows we will assume that you were able to install to directory | 
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| 81 | \c /usr/local, otherwise some extra care is to be taken to use the | 
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| 82 | library. | 
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| 83 |  | 
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| 84 | We briefly explain these commands below. | 
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| 85 |  | 
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| 86 | \verbatim | 
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| 87 | tar xvzf lemon-0.3.1.tar.gz | 
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| 88 | \endverbatim | 
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| 89 | This command untars the <tt>tar.gz</tt> file into a directory named <tt> | 
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| 90 | lemon-0.3.1</tt>. | 
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| 91 |  | 
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| 92 | \verbatim | 
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| 93 | cd lemon-0.3.1 | 
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| 94 | \endverbatim | 
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| 95 | Enters the directory. | 
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| 96 |  | 
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| 97 | \verbatim | 
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| 98 | ./configure | 
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| 99 | \endverbatim | 
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| 100 | Does some configuration (creates makefiles etc). | 
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| 101 |  | 
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| 102 | \verbatim | 
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| 103 | make | 
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| 104 | \endverbatim | 
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| 105 | This command compiles the non-template part of LEMON into | 
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| 106 | <b>libemon.a</b> file. It also compiles some benchmark and demo | 
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| 107 | programs. | 
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| 108 |  | 
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| 109 | \verbatim | 
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| 110 | make check | 
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| 111 | \endverbatim | 
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| 112 | This is an optional step: it runs the test programs that we | 
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| 113 | developed for LEMON to check whether the library works properly on | 
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| 114 | your platform. | 
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| 115 |  | 
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| 116 | \verbatim | 
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| 117 | make install | 
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| 118 | \endverbatim | 
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| 119 | This will copy the directory structure to its final destination (e.g. to \c | 
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| 120 | /usr/local) so that your system can access it. This command should | 
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| 121 | be issued as "root", unless you provided a \c --prefix switch to | 
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| 122 | the \c configure to install the library in non-default location. | 
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| 123 |  | 
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| 124 |  | 
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| 125 | \subsection configureFlags Configure flags | 
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| 126 |  | 
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| 127 | You can pass the following flags to \c ./configure (see \c ./configure --help | 
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| 128 | for more): | 
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| 129 |  | 
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| 130 | \verbatim | 
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| 131 | --enable-gui | 
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| 132 | \endverbatim | 
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| 133 | Build the GUI. | 
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| 134 |  | 
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| 135 | \verbatim | 
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| 136 | --disable-gui | 
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| 137 | \endverbatim | 
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| 138 | Do not build the GUI (default). | 
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| 139 |  | 
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| 140 | \verbatim | 
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| 141 | --with-glpk[=PREFIX] | 
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| 142 | \endverbatim | 
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| 143 | Enable GLPK support (default). You should specify the prefix too if you | 
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| 144 | installed it to some non-standard location (e.g. your home directory). If | 
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| 145 | GLPK is not found, then GLPK support will be disabled. | 
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| 146 |  | 
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| 147 | \verbatim | 
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| 148 | --with-glpk-includedir=DIR | 
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| 149 | \endverbatim | 
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| 150 | The directory where the GLPK header files are located. This is only useful when | 
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| 151 | the GLPK headers and libraries are not under the same prefix (which is | 
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| 152 | unlikely). | 
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| 153 |  | 
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| 154 | \verbatim | 
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| 155 | --with-glpk-libdir=DIR | 
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| 156 | \endverbatim | 
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| 157 | The directory where the GLPK libraries are located. This is only useful when | 
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| 158 | the GLPK headers and libraries are not under the same prefix (which is | 
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| 159 | unlikely). | 
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| 160 |  | 
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| 161 | \verbatim | 
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| 162 | --without-glpk | 
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| 163 | \endverbatim | 
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| 164 | Disable GLPK support. | 
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| 165 |  | 
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| 166 | \verbatim | 
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| 167 | --with-cplex[=PREFIX] | 
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| 168 | \endverbatim | 
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| 169 | Enable CPLEX support (default). You should specify the prefix too if you | 
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| 170 | installed it to some non-standard location (e.g. \c /opt/ilog/cplex75). If | 
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| 171 | CPLEX is not found, then CPLEX support will be disabled. | 
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| 172 |  | 
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| 173 | \verbatim | 
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| 174 | --with-cplex-includedir=DIR | 
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| 175 | \endverbatim | 
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| 176 | The directory where the CPLEX header files are located. This is only useful | 
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| 177 | when the CPLEX headers and libraries are not under the same prefix. | 
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| 178 |  | 
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| 179 | \verbatim | 
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| 180 | --with-cplex-libdir=DIR | 
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| 181 | \endverbatim | 
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| 182 | The directory where the CPLEX libraries are located. This is only useful when | 
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| 183 | the CPLEX headers and libraries are not under the same prefix. | 
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| 184 |  | 
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| 185 | \verbatim | 
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| 186 | --without-cplex | 
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| 187 | \endverbatim | 
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| 188 | Disable CPLEX support. | 
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| 189 |  | 
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| 190 |  | 
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| 191 | \section svnCheckout How to checkout LEMON form our Subversion repository | 
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| 192 |  | 
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| 193 | You can obtain the latest version of LEMON from our Subversion repository. To | 
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| 194 | do this issue the following command: | 
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| 195 | \verbatim | 
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| 196 | svn co https://lemon.cs.elte.hu/svn/hugo/trunk lemon | 
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| 197 | \endverbatim | 
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| 198 | Use "lemon" as username, the password is empty. | 
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| 199 |  | 
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| 200 |  | 
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| 201 | \section svnCompile How to compile the source from the repository | 
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| 202 |  | 
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| 203 | You can compile the code from the repository similarly to the packaged version, | 
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| 204 | but you will need to run \c ./bootstrap before \c ./configure. See \c | 
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| 205 | ./bootstrap \c --help for options. For bootstrapping you will need the | 
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| 206 | following tools: | 
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| 207 |  | 
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| 208 | - <a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/automake/">automake</a> (1.7 or newer) | 
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| 209 | - <a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/autoconf/">autoconf</a> (2.59 or newer) | 
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| 210 | - <a href="http://www.gnu.org/software/libtool/">libtool</a> | 
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| 211 | - <a href="http://pkgconfig.freedesktop.org/">pkgconfig</a> | 
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| 212 |  | 
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| 213 | To generate the documentation, run \c make \c doc. You will need | 
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| 214 | <a href="http://www.doxygen.org/">Doxygen</a> for this. | 
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| 215 |  | 
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| 216 | You can pass the \c --enable-doc=full flag to \c ./configure to generate the | 
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| 217 | internal documentation too. | 
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| 218 |  | 
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| 219 | If you pass the \c --disable-doc flag to \c ./configure then the documentation | 
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| 220 | won't be installed, when you run \c make \c install (this speeds things up a | 
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| 221 | bit). | 
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| 222 |  | 
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| 223 | \section helloworld My first program using LEMON | 
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| 224 |  | 
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| 225 | If you have installed LEMON on your system you can paste the | 
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| 226 | following code segment into a file (you can find it as \c | 
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| 227 | demo/hello_lemon.cc in the LEMON package) to have a first working | 
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| 228 | program that uses library LEMON. | 
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| 229 |  | 
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| 230 | \dontinclude hello_lemon.cc | 
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| 231 | \skip include | 
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| 232 | \until } | 
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| 233 |  | 
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| 234 | First let us briefly explain how this program works. | 
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| 235 |  | 
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| 236 | ListGraph is one of LEMON's graph classes. It is based on linked lists, | 
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| 237 | therefore iterating throuh its edges and nodes is fast. | 
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| 238 |  | 
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| 239 | After some convenience typedefs we create a graph and add three nodes to it. | 
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| 240 | Then we add edges to it to form a complete graph. | 
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| 241 |  | 
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| 242 | Then we iterate through all nodes of the graph. We use a constructor of the | 
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| 243 | node iterator to initialize it to the first node. The operator++ is used to | 
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| 244 | step to the next node. Using operator++ on the iterator pointing to the last | 
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| 245 | node invalidates the iterator i.e. sets its value to | 
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| 246 | \ref lemon::INVALID "INVALID". This is what we exploit in the stop condition. | 
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| 247 |  | 
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| 248 | We can also iterate through all edges of the graph very similarly. The | 
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| 249 | \c target and | 
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| 250 | \c source member functions can be used to access the endpoints of an edge. | 
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| 251 |  | 
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| 252 | If your installation of LEMON into directory \c /usr/local was | 
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| 253 | successful, then it is very easy to compile this program with the | 
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| 254 | following command (the argument <tt>-lemon</tt> tells the compiler | 
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| 255 | that we are using the installed library LEMON): | 
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| 256 |  | 
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| 257 | \verbatim | 
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| 258 | g++ hello_lemon.cc -o hello_lemon -lemon | 
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| 259 | \endverbatim | 
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| 260 |  | 
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| 261 | As a result you will get the exacutable \c hello_lemon in | 
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| 262 | this directory that you can run by the command | 
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| 263 | \verbatim | 
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| 264 | ./hello_lemon | 
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| 265 | \endverbatim | 
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| 266 |  | 
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| 267 |  | 
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| 268 | If everything has gone well then the previous code fragment prints | 
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| 269 | out the following: | 
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| 270 |  | 
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| 271 | \verbatim | 
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| 272 | Nodes: 2 1 0 | 
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| 273 |  | 
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| 274 | Edges: (0,2) (1,2) (0,1) (2,1) (1,0) (2,0) | 
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| 275 | \endverbatim | 
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| 276 |  | 
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| 277 | Congratulations! | 
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| 278 |  | 
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| 279 | If you want to see more features, go to the | 
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| 280 | \ref quicktour "Quick Tour to LEMON", | 
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| 281 | if you want to see see some demo programs then go to our | 
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| 282 | \ref demoprograms "Demo Programs" page! | 
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| 283 |  | 
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| 284 |  | 
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| 285 | */ | 
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