Mail Archives: cygwin/2000/05/25/11:58:32
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> > When you get right down to it, cygwin is NOT windows. It
> does everything
> > it can to make windows look like Unix, so that apps can run
> *as if they
> > were on unix* with little or no changes. So, by that logic,
> > cygwin-zip/unzip =should= be built as unix-ish apps, not windows-ish
> > ones.
>
> Maybe you are right.
> I personally look at gcc as a free alternative for a good
> Win32 compiler,
> but I agree that cygwin is a "Unix on Win" and maybe most of
> the people
> look at it that way.
ISTM that the right behavior would be for cygwin to build a UNIX-ish (un)zip
and for mingw to build a Windows style program. As already pointed out
cygwin should be thought of as "Unix on Win" and IMO mingw should be thought
of as "as a free alternative for a good Win32 compiler".
I realize that cygwin and mingw are both supported by the same compiler, but
supplying -mno-cygwin causes gcc to switch from cygwin to mingw behavior and
__MINGW32__ becomes defined.
This may be more a question for cygwin-developers, but I hate crossposts and
know most readers of that list at least review this one. So, wouldn't it be
appropriate when compiling without -mno-cygwin for the specs file to define
"unix", "UNIX" and similar "standard" defines? They seem to be checked for
in newlib, zlib, X11, and many other sources?
Yes I know I can make this change in my local sources, but I prefer to work
with standard sources and now seemed a good time to bring it up. I have
been wondering about it for some time.
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