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  1. R

    gcc

    Ahh, but it does. You see, gcc does the same thing that cc does. When you run g++, you are really running gcc, just with a whole lot of arguments to turn C into C++ (C++ uses different libraries and such, but aside from the extensions works the same underneath, but works in a way that is...
  2. R

    gcc

    But, if you don't have Darwin 1.2 downloaded, that is an even bigger download. Plus, you still have to join an Apple developer group to get access (or maybe that's just for the sources, but whatever). I guess it just depends on what you want. If you get the Mac OS X developer tools, you'll...
  3. R

    make just won\\\\\\\'t work

    It is under gnumake. If you apropos for make, you will find it, along with a bunch of other man pages that happen to have the word make. There is a mention in the man pages about the fact that Info pages prefered for make documentation, but I haven\'t looked to see if info is around in Mac OS...
  4. R

    gcc

    If you don\'t *have* to have gcc and friends, you can use the Apple version that comes with the developer tools. Yeah, it\'s a pain to go through the process to become an Online ADC member and to download the 80 MB tarball, but once you\'ve got the stuff installed it\'s worth it. I haven\'t...
  5. R

    make just won\\\\\\\'t work

    I\'ve never had this problem until comming to Mac OS X, so there is something that I\'m missing here. When I want to install Unix software, most of the time the procedure is the same: run ./configure, run make, run make install. The first step works fine, but the anything to do with make just...
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