I wrote > [Summary: Cygwin is good to compile programs on win32 with minimal > porting effort, but a stable port should use MinGW]
replace cygwin by "cygwin's posix runtime environment" and MinGW by "MinGW's or -mno-cygwin's msvcrt environment" and you get what I meant. I never noticed that it was that misleading. Christopher Faylor schrieb: > I don't mind people being excited about MinGW but it doesn't have to be > at the expense of Cygwin. A "stable port" of a windows-only application > could easily be maintained with Cygwin's gcc. Implying that cygwin > produces unstable code is not necessary. Yes, but I don't think that a stable _port_ to Windows should use the cygwin POSIX _runtime_ environment. A port should use -mno-cygwin or MinGW runtime environment. Do we agree on that point? > I understand and respect that there are good reasons to use MinGW but > promoting urban myths about cygwin is not a good way to promote the > project. Sorry. I never said that cygwin's gcc is incapable of producing correct code (if used properly). But as a separate point: One year ago I made such bad experience with -mno-cygwin that I never even considered using it again [I need C++ and libtool]. (See separate mail) Christof _______________________________________________ Dia-list mailing list [EMAIL PROTECTED] http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/dia-list