From: margot AT astrosun DOT tn DOT cornell DOT edu (Jean-Luc Margot) Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp Subject: Can I have gcc and make and emacs?? Date: 2 Dec 1996 17:33:40 GMT Organization: Cornell University Lines: 42 Sender: jlm17 AT cornell DOT edu (Verified) Message-ID: <57v3tk$as0@newsstand.cit.cornell.edu> NNTP-Posting-Host: ishtar.tn.cornell.edu To: djgpp AT delorie DOT com DJ-Gateway: from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp Hi, I am new to the world of djgpp. I am basically very excited that this port of gcc makes working with DOS less painful. However, there are two annoying problems that came with my installation of djgpp (OK, I confess I was in a hurry and I installed ez-gcc, which uses BNU252BN.ZIP and GCC263BN.ZIP) First, I cannot use my DOS version of emacs anymore (oemacs 4.1). The FAQ does mention this problem, but it does not offer any real solution. Here is what I could find in revision 1.2 of the FAQ : 9.7 Q: When I run OEmacs, it dies with ``Unsupported DOS request''. A: OEmacs needs a special version of go32. Make sure it is accessible to OEmacs before it finds the stock go32 on your PATH. Has anybody found a way to have both emacs and gcc work _satisfactorily_ under DOS (Yes, I can still start emacs from the emacs/bin directory, but I am not happy about this solution)? I like gcc very much, but I am not willing to give up emacs... Secondly, there is the emacs/make/gcc ``Not enough memory to run go32'' problem. Again, this is covered in the FAQ, but it did not help much (I did look for another version of make, but the recommended gnuish/ directory on SimTel does not exist) Has anybody found a version of make which allows to compile with gcc while emacs is running? I am _not_ willing to quit emacs and restart it whenever I need to compile. (I guess it must be pretty obvious by now that I am used to a multitasking environment :-) I guess people will tell me to upgrade to the most recent version which solves the problems. I will do that eventually, but I'd rather find a quick fix for now. Any suggestions are welcome. Thanks Jean-Luc Margot