The Pango backends written for Win32 is pangowin32. Pangowin32 uses the Win32 GDI font API. GTK+ 2.8 and later on Win32 however actually uses the pangocairo backend (which then uses only small parts of pangowin32). Much of the GDI font API calls are in cairo. The pangoft2 backend was originally written with Win32 in mind, but its main use nowadays is on other platforms than Win32. To build Pango for Win32: You need to have gcc (mingw) or Visual Studio 2008~2017, along with Python 3.4.x+ and Meson 0.43.0. If building the introspection files, you will also need to ensure that the Python release series and build architecture (i.e. Win32 (x86)/x64 (amd64/x86-64) matches the Python release series and build architecture that was used to build GObject-Introspection. The Python interpreter executable directory must be in your PATH. The Ninja build utility must also be in your PATH, unless using the Visual Studio IDE as noted below. You will also need the following libraries installed with their headers and import libraries, and their DLLs, if applicable, needs to be found in %PATH%. All of their required dependencies are required as well. Their pkg-config files are needed on all builds unless marked with a *, where only their headers/import libraries are needed on Visual Studio: -GLib -Fribidi -Cairo* (With Win32 support built in, and optionally FreeType and FontConfig support for building PangoFT2.) -FreeType* (Optional, needed for PangoFT2) -FontConfig* (Optional, needed for PangoFT2) -HarfBuzz* (Optional, GLib and FreeType support required if used, needed for PangoFT2) Please see meson.build to see what versions are needed for these dependencies. Follow the following steps to build Pango: 1) Invoke the Meson configuration as follows, in a directory separate from the sources: (With MinGW, please adjust the paths accordingly, in a MSYS/MSYS2 bash prompt) PATH=/devel/dist/glib-2.8.0/bin:$PATH ACLOCAL_FLAGS="-I /devel/dist/glib-2.8.0/share/aclocal" PKG_CONFIG_PATH=/devel/dist/glib-2.8.0/lib/pkgconfig:$PKG_CONFIG_PATH CC='gcc -mtune=pentium3' CPPFLAGS='-I/opt/gnu/include' LDFLAGS='-L/opt/gnu/lib' CFLAGS=-O meson $(PATH_TO_SRC) --buildtype=$(buildtype) --prefix=$(PREFIX) (With Visual Studio, set the INCLUDE, LIB, PATH and PKG_CONFIG_PATH envvars as needed before running the following in a Visual Studio command prompt) python $(PATH_TO_meson.py) $(PATH_TO_SRC) --buildtype=$(buildtype) --prefix=$(PREFIX) For Visual Studio builds, building using the Visual Studio IDE is also supported with Visual Studio 2010, 2015 and 2017. Append --backend=vs to the Meson configuration command above to use this support. 2) Build Pango by running Ninja, or by opening and building the generated Visual Studio 2010/2015/2017 solution file. 3) Run tests and/or install the build using the "test" and "install" targets or sub-projects respectively. 4) If building with Visual Studio 2008, you will need to do the run the following lines in the Visual Studio or SDK command prompt after building and installing. From the build directory: for /f %a in (*.dll.manifest) do if exist $(PREFIX)\bin\%~na /manifest %a /outputresource:$(PREFIX)\bin\%~na;2 for /f %a in (*.exe.manifest) do if exist $(PREFIX)\bin\%~na /manifest %a /outputresource:$(PREFIX)\bin\%~na;1 for /f %a in (*.exe.manifest) do if exist $(PREFIX)\libexec\installed-tests\pango\%~na /manifest %a /outputresource:$(PREFIX)\libexec\installed-tests\pango\%~na;1 So that the security manifests that are generated can be embedded into the built DLLs and EXEs so that they can be usable. See the following GNOME Live! page for a more detailed description of building Pango's dependencies with Visual Studio: https://live.gnome.org/GTK%2B/Win32/MSVCCompilationOfGTKStack