On 7/21/05, Jeremy Shute <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > My figuring is: yes, you could install with all Microsoft tools and > NTEmacs (and yes, that's the "ideal" way to go about it), but you can > always postpone that after you've hacked a nice large codebase. > > You can always use Yannis' install right out of the box to build > everything if you need commercial distribution. For development, > sticking to Cygwin may violate your morale, but hey. It gets the job done. Doesn't this open a whole new can of worms?
* linking to windows libraries * environments * compilation management (makefiles on Cygwin and some script for Windows) ? > I HAVE dropped in the free Microsoft compilers with a simple batch > file. See my web page (crazilocks.com) for details. They're out of > date, but something similar will work. Thanks, although I have already gotten to the point where `bigloo hello_world.scm` works (at a great expense of man-hours that could be more useful elsewhere, I must say, and I had to give up on compiling bigloo from sources) > Remember that Bee makes little sense in the case of Windows-only > environments, anyway. The debugger doesn't work either? > Windows doesn't have GNU Make. (One of the best > reasons to use Bee!!!) If you're talking MinGW, maybe it's a different > story. For Bigloo programmers, what does MS Visual Studio IDE offer? -- Unsubscribe info: http://cygwin.com/ml/#unsubscribe-simple Problem reports: http://cygwin.com/problems.html Documentation: http://cygwin.com/docs.html FAQ: http://cygwin.com/faq/