cmake-init-clang-on-windows
CIDLib
cmake-init-clang-on-windows | CIDLib | |
---|---|---|
9 | 35 | |
9 | 208 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 0.0 | |
over 2 years ago | over 2 years ago | |
CMake | C++ | |
- | MIT License |
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cmake-init-clang-on-windows
- Using Clang on Windows without Visual Studio.
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Best compiler for C99
Or LLVM Clang directly without a pseudo *nix environment: https://github.com/friendlyanon/cmake-init-clang-on-windows
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Cross Compile
While not embedded, but here is an example for compiling with LLVM Clang on Windows without needing vcvarsall.
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Why does Microsoft want to ditch C?
I was informed that this is not the case. lld supports PE/COFF natively on Windows. You just need to provide some flags to use the MSVC .lib and include files to use Clang properly. Or use the vcvarsall, but that's stinky and I don't like having all that env stuff in my terminal all the time.
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Quick guide to Windows programming for Unix/Linux C programmers?
Regarding building, I'd advise staying as far away from Mingw, msys and Cygwin as possible. You can just use LLVM Clang without any issue on Windows. You can keep using vim with Clang tools as if you were on Linux still.
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What Linux distros and environment setup are recommended/optimal for C++ development?
CMake, Clang and Conan work all the same on all operating systems. I don't know why you would like to force yourself into one kind of environment that might not suit your needs in other areas as well. On Windows, you can even use LLVM Clang without godawful hacks like mingw.
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Build2 seems to have the right idea.
From a quick searching I found what it takes to compile a Windows executable on macOS, these flags could be very easily turned into a toolchain file and the situation would be similar on Linux as well.
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Thoughts on build systems?
cmake-init was just for a general project setup. One of the examples in fact shows what a toolchain file should look like.
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Installing c compiler on windows 10.
You can also just use LLVM Clang on Windows. Still requires MSVC installed though, because of link.exe, system .libs and system headers.
CIDLib
- Remaining Relevant Over Four Decades
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When Zig is safer and faster than (unsafe) Rust
It's open source. It's in two parts CIDLib, which is the general purpose layer: https://github.com/DeanRoddey/CIDLib/
- Using Exceptions for all Error Handling.... in Theory
- The Cargo Cult of Good Code
- Do any of you use python or another scripting language instead of a build system?
- Why C++ devs earn so much more than js and python?
- C++ Developers of Reddit, tell your story
- 30,000 hours
- Systems Programming & Memory Safety
- Can't modern c++ be as safe as rust?
What are some alternatives?
Vcpkg - C++ Library Manager for Windows, Linux, and MacOS
vulkan-guide - Introductory guide to vulkan.
conan - Conan - The open-source C and C++ package manager
kanzi-cpp - Fast lossless data compression in C++
raylib - A simple and easy-to-use library to enjoy videogames programming
NetFabric.Hyperlinq - High performance LINQ implementation with minimal heap allocations. Supports enumerables, async enumerables, arrays and Span<T>.
libpq - build2 package for PostgreSQL C client library
going-native-py - Bringing the power, stability and functional capabilities of C++ to Python.
sol2 - `build2` package of `sol2`
cmake-init-executable - Example executable output of cmake-init
spdlog - build2 package of the spdlog library
cmake-init - The missing CMake project initializer