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Re: Binaries
- To: help-gcc at gnu dot org
- Subject: Re: Binaries
- From: khan at xraylith dot wisc dot edu (Mumit Khan)
- Date: 4 Dec 1999 04:23:36 GMT
- Newsgroups: gnu.g++.help,gnu.gcc.help
- Organization: Center for X-ray Lithography, UW-Madison
- References: <829vt3$l7r$1@news5.jaring.my>
- Xref: wodc7nx0 gnu.g++.help:1117 gnu.gcc.help:2072
In article <829vt3$l7r$1@news5.jaring.my>,
starman <starman@pd.jaring.nospam.my> wrote:
>Where can i get binaries (Intel Win98) for GNU C++??
See my usual blurb below.
>What is the difference between GNU g++ and GNU C++??
One and the same -- GNU g++ is the name of GNU C++ compiler. The
GNU C++ compiler driver (ie., the program you run to compile and
link C++ code) is installed as both g++ and c++.
See http://www.xraylith.wisc.edu/~khan/software/gnu-win32/ for 3 different
gcc-2.95.2 ports to various win32 targets.
- Cygwin -- Uses Cygnus' POSIX API (Unix'y)
http://sourceware.cygnus.com/cygwin/
- Mingw -- Use Microsoft runtime, no POSIX (native Win32)
- UWIN -- Uses AT&T UWIN POSIX API (Unix'y)
http://www.research.att.com/sw/tools/uwin/
There is short synopsis of these terms (Cygwin, Mingw, UWIN) on my
web site to help you decide.
For either Cygwin or UWIN, you need install the base system from
respective sites. For Mingw, all you need are the compiler tools
from my site (self extracting package).
All distributions come with C, C++, F77, ObjC compilers and runtime
headers/libraries. Cygwin and UWIN also come with GNU Java compiler.
See http://gcc.gnu.org/ for information on GCC compilers.
For DOS target, see http://www.delorie.com/djgpp/.
Regards,
Mumit