I’m aware this has been the case since Windows 3.x, you always need an external program to ensure the executable is created with the icon you want. Why?
Please no mentions of Linux and other OSs, I know it’s trivial to do so for them.
I’m aware this has been the case since Windows 3.x, you always need an external program to ensure the executable is created with the icon you want. Why?
Please no mentions of Linux and other OSs, I know it’s trivial to do so for them.
I don’t want a shortcut, I want the binary with a different icon. Programs compiled “from scratch” don’t have an icon and a shortcut is useless when a separate person downloads the binary in “the wrong folder”.
As someone that wrote Windows applications for a living, that’s wrong. You just have to add a resource file and your icon.
You add the icon to resource file when compiling don’t you?
I don’t remember it being much of a chore. But it’s been a while since I created a desktop app.
I’m fairly sure Linux requires a separate file to specify the icon as well doesn’t it?