Re: Porting projects from Windows
Re: Porting projects from Windows
- Subject: Re: Porting projects from Windows
- From: David Dunham <email@hidden>
- Date: Wed, 10 Sep 2008 16:44:18 -0700
On 10 Sep 2008, at 16:24, Thomas Hauk wrote:
Maybe I can explain with an example.
Please copy the list.
Say I have Applications A1 and A2. A1 uses packages P1 and P2, and
A2 uses packages P1 and P3.
With Visual Studio, I can create a solution for A1 that includes
A1, P1 and P3. While working with this solution open, if I make a
change to a source file that lives in P3, Visual Studio
automatically knows the entire solution needs a rebuild. I can also
create a solution for A2 and I can use the same project file for P1.
In Xcode, how do I accomplish all of this? Most importantly, the
ability for the IDE to automatically know when a dependency needs
to be recompiled. If at all possible, it would also be nice to keep
just a single window open for all of this, and not one per package,
and also have to manually determine when a package needs to be
recompiled.
Drag P1.xcodeproj into A1.xcodeproj.
In the Target Info for A1, be sure P1 is a direct dependency.
I think you may also need to make sure there's a check on libP1.a (in
the View > Detail window).
As for your nightmare of configurations, I'm not really sure what
you're describing, and I've been on some very large cross-platform
projects over the years.
This is pure Windows. If A1 has a "DirectX Debug" configuration and
P1 has a "Debug DirectX" configuration, it quickly becomes
problematic at the .sln level.
David Dunham A Sharp, LLC
Voice/Fax: 206 783 7404 http://a-sharp.com
"People seem to misinterpret complexity as sophistication" -- Niklaus
Wirth
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