Mail Archives: djgpp/2000/03/30/14:29:43
Klytu wrote:
>
> Actually I DID read the readme.1st (I actually keep a hard copy of it near
> my computer so I can navigate in 'info ' more easily). It turns out that
> this is more of a question about RHIDE than about DJGPP per se. I discovered
> today that all I had to do was to go to an MSDOS prompt, change directory to
> the directory where my source files are, and call RHIDE within that
> directory. Then I can use RHIDE to compile right from that directory. I
> still haven't figured out how to get RHIDE to look in multiple other
> directories for header files, but I think I may have been using the wrong
> syntax to list multiple include paths in RHIDE's
> (options>directories>include).
Ahh ok, that makes sense too. I never used RHIDE, so I can't help you
here :)
> So basically, your comment was not at all helpful! But I still thank you for
> responding and at least trying to aid someone lost. I read many of the posts
> here and I have noticed that many times when a beginner asks a question that
> is answered somewhere in the documentation, it is not at all obvious to that
> beginner exactly where the answer can be found. Sometimes (as I think is the
> case with me here), a novice may not even ask precisely the right question.
> But all responses are still appreciated as sometimes they can lead to the
> right place to start.
Often, we learn by helping others, and in this case it's true (though I
doubt I will ever use RHIDE, so my newly acquired knowledge will be
sleeping on one of my neurons for a long time, but still, you get the
point:) That's what I love about the DJGPP community: everyone is there
to help :) the technical support is worth alot more than the price of
most commercial software.
.(Trancelucid).
. Jaune .
> "Jonathan Meunier" <jonathanm AT corel DOT com> wrote in message
> news:38E22A2E DOT 5C3084C AT corel DOT com...
> > Did you read the readme.1st? It should be in your DJGPP root dir.. If
> > not, read it from
> > http://www.simtel.net/pub/simtelnet/gnu/djgpp/v2/readme.1st (or any
> > closer mirror).
> >
> > Why exactly can't you compile in another directory? If it says "Bad
> > command or file name" when invoking gcc/gpp, then this simply means you
> > haven't set the environment variables and the path.. All this is in the
> > readme.1st, so you should get out of this relatively painlessly.
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