WAVE installation notes For its GUI, requires the XView toolkit, which is available only as a 32-bit package. On 32-bit platforms, WAVE is installed automatically when installing the WFDB Software Package if you have installed the X11 and XView development packages (see below). On 64-bit GNU/Linux platforms, install the WFDB Software Package (without WAVE) first, then follow the instructions for your platform below to install WAVE. We have not tested WAVE on 64-bit Mac OS X or MS-Windows platforms. If your 64-bit platform is not mentioned below, we have not tested it, and you may wish to try running WAVE on a 32-bit platform in a virtual machine.
WAVE has been frozen since mid-2010, and we are not planning to update it. Is a web application that runs in any modern browser, providing superior waveform viewing and most of the annotation-editing capabilities of WAVE, with no software installation required. LightWAVE is currently limited to data available in PhysioBank and PhysioNetWorks, however, and it does not yet offer the flexible control and integration of external signal-processing and data analysis applications available using WAVE.
XnView is a software to view and convert graphic files. It's really easy to use and it supports more that 400 different graphics formats. 1License and operating system information is based on latest version of the software. 31 May 2012XnView for Mac OS X v1.70.1(Latest stable version). This is the default for xview and xloadimage. -version Print the version number and patchlevel of this version of xloadimage. -view View image(s) in a window. This is the opposite of -onroot and the default for xview and xloadimage. -visual visual_name Force the use of a specific visual type to display an image.
Installing WAVE on 32-bit platforms If you are unsure if yours is a 32-bit platform, run the command uname -m If the output is x8664, yours is a 64-bit platform, and the instructions in this section will not work for you. Look for instructions for your platform elsewhere on this page. And the packages they require if they have not been installed already.
Check for the presence of Xlib.h, which is usually found in /usr/include/X11, to see if the X11 development package has been installed. Check for the presence of xview, which is usually found in /usr/include or /usr/openwin/include, to see if the XView development package has been installed. The X11 developer's toolkit is usually contained in a package named libX11-devel or libX11-dev; on some older platforms, the package may be called xorg-x11-devel or XFree86-devel. PhysioNet's pages contain instructions for installing XView on supported platforms.
Be sure to install not only the basic xview package, but also the xview-clients and xview-devel packages. On Ubuntu or Debian, ' apt-get install xviewg-dev' suffices. Once the X11 and XView development packages have been installed, follow the WFDB quick-start instructions for your platform. Check that the summary output of./configure shows that WAVE will be compiled; if not, check that all of the prerequisites are installed and rerun./configure.
![How to install xview for mac os How to install xview for mac os](http://a4.mzstatic.com/us/r30/Purple/v4/fb/e9/cb/fbe9cba4-9e00-b6da-3219-ef8310ed813e/screen800x500.jpeg)
Installing WAVE on 64-bit Fedora (and similar) platforms On 64-bit Fedora, simply install the WFDB Software Package following the instructions, then run (as root) the command./install-wave32 within the WFDB source directory that also contains configure, to install WAVE and a 32-bit WFDB library in subdirectories of /usr/local. To install in another location, use./install-wave32 -prefix=/another/location Note that this command must still be run as root even if root privileges are not needed to write in /another/location, unless the 32-bit libcurl, X11, and XView development packages have already been installed. This method should also work on Red Hat Linux, Centos, Scientific Linux, and other RPM-based distributions based on Fedora or Red Hat. See the comments in install-wave32 for troubleshooting hints, which may require changing repository names in the script for your Linux platform.
Installing WAVE on 64-bit Debian or Ubuntu. If you have not already done so, first, then return here. Use sudo -s (or su) to get root privileges, which are needed for most of the steps below. Ensure that i386 is enabled in your dpkg configuration: dpkg -add-architecture i386. Debian only: XView is no longer supported in Debian 9 (stretch).