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Installation
In order to install CCExtractor you need to have the following libraries installed: gcc tesseract-ocr libtesseract-dev libleptonica-dev libcurl4-gnutls-dev libgpac-dev
You can install them using apt-get or paste this in your terminal
sudo apt-get install -y gcc
sudo apt-get install -y libcurl4-gnutls-dev
sudo apt-get install -y tesseract-ocr
sudo apt-get install -y libtesseract-dev
sudo apt-get install -y libleptonica-dev
sudo apt-get install -y libgpac-dev # required for ccextractor after May 2023
Note: On Ubuntu Version 14.04 (Trusty) and earlier, you should build leptonica and tesseract from source
There are 3 ways to set up ccextractor depending on your choice.
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First and easiest way is to go in the linux folder and use the build script.
cd linux && ./build
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Standard linux compilation through Autoconf scripts. You'll need to have autoconf installed using apt-get.
./autogen.sh && ./configure && make
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Using Cmake.
mkdir build && cd build; cmake ../src/ && make
After Installation you can now use CCExtractor. To use it call CCExtractor from the terminal by doing ./ccextractor <file>
To use CCExtractor with a gui you will additionally need to install GLEW and GLFW
In order to compile it you'll need to configure it using autoconf. The only difference passing the -with-gui
option to
./configure
.
./autogen.sh && ./configure --with-gui && make
Once set up you can run the GUI interface from the terminal ./ccextractorGUI
In Order to install CCExtractor you need to have the following libraries installed: gcc, tesseract-devel, gpac
Don't worry tesseract-devel comes default with leptonica
For gpac-devel you will need rpm-fusion free repository
You can install them using yum or paste this in your terminal
sudo yum install -y gcc
sudo yum install -y tesseract-devel
sudo yum install -y gpac-devel # required for ccextractor after May 2023
There are 3 ways to set up ccextractor depending on your choice.
-
First and easiest way is to go in the linux folder and use the build script.
cd linux && ./build
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Standard linux compilation through Autoconf scripts. You'll need to have autoconf and automake installed using yum to generate configuration script.
./autogen.sh && ./configure && make
- Using Cmake.
mkdir build && cd build; cmake ../src/ && make
After Installation you can now use CCExtractor. To use it call CCExtractor from the terminal by doing ./ccextractor <file>
To use CCExtractor with a gui you will additionally need to install GLEW and GLFW
In order to compile it you'll need to configure it using autoconf. The only difference passing the -with-gui
option to ./configure
.
./autogen.sh && ./configure --with-gui && make
Once set up you can run the GUI interface from the terminal ./ccextractorGUI
In Order to install CCExtractor on your MacOS device you need to have the following libraries installed: pkg-config, autoconf,automake, libtool, tesseract, leptonica, gpac
You can install them using homebrew or paste this in your terminal
brew install pkg-config
brew install autoconf automake libtool
brew install tesseract
brew install leptonica
brew install gpac # required for ccextractor after May 2023
To verify that leptonica and tesseract are succesfully installed run pkg-config to check for errors. You can test by using this command:
pkg-config --exists --print-errors tesseract
pkg-config --exists --print-errors lept
There are 3 ways to set up ccextractor depending on your choice.
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First and easiest way is to go in the mac folder and use the build script.
cd mac && ./build.command
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Standard mac compilation through Autoconf scripts.
./autogen.sh && ./configure && make
- Using Cmake.
mkdir build && cd build; cmake ../src/ && make
After Installation you can now use CCExtractor. To use it call CCExtractor from the terminal by doing ./ccextractor <file>
To use CCExtractor with a gui you will additionally need to install GLEW and GLFW. You can do that by installing it via homebrew using:
brew install glfw
brew install glew
In order to compile it you'll need to configure it using autoconf. The only difference passing the -with-gui
option to ./configure
.
./autogen.sh && ./configure --with-gui && make
Once set up you can run the GUI interface from the terminal ./ccextractorGUI
This method takes advantage of GitHub extension for Visual Studio, so you can work on the ccextractor repo from within Visual Studio.
Click "Download for Visual Studio". Confirm the browser prompt (if any). Visual Studio will load; now click Clone.
Click on "Solutions and Folders", then "ccextractor.sln".
If you don't want to download via VS, you can click "Download ZIP" on ccextractor's GitHub page.
After extracting the downloaded ZIP, open windows/
directory to locate ccextractor.vcxproj
, ccextractorGUI.vcxproj
(blue arrows) and ccextractor.sln
(red arrow).
By default, the projects are targeted at VS 2015 on WinXP. You will need to re-target the projects; otherwise you'll get an error.
In Solution Explorer, right-click >> Properties for the two projects. Update the VS version and Windows SDK version to parameters which match your installation.
CCextractor should be built with configuration options Debug-Full
or Release-Full
, as shown below.
Note: After this step, you may need to repeat the previous step of re-targeting the projects.
Right click and select build
to compile the project and generate the executables.
Find the executable file in Debug-Full
or Release-Full
folder, based on selected configuration.
Notes:
Configurations options are: (Debug|Release)-Full
Configurations options include dependent libraries which are used for OCR.
Go to the package_creators folder using cd
and run the ./arch.sh
Go to the package_creators folder using cd
and run the ./rpm.sh