I know of make. I am not sufficiently familiar with it. Yes, I should take
the time to educate myself. No, I have not yet done so. Programmers do
various compiles in various ways. One of the ways this programmer does
compiles is by compiling all of the members of a particular folder.  

As I wrote in my OP, the documentation seems to imply that what I am doing
should work. (Yes, the page you found seems to contradict that.)

You can specify compilation for a single file or all source files in a z/OS
UNIX directory, for example:
//SYSIN DD PATH='/u/david'
//* All files in the directory /u/david are compiled

That seems pretty clear to me. All source files = all source files in my
book.

Charles

-----Original Message-----
From: IBM Mainframe Discussion List [mailto:[email protected]] On
Behalf Of Jack J. Woehr
Sent: Wednesday, September 23, 2015 9:05 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Compiling a folder of mixed C and C++

Jack J. Woehr wrote:
> Charles Mills wrote:
>> Anyone?
>>
> Reading http://publibz.boulder.ibm.com/epubs/pdf/cbc1u201.pdf page 390, it
appears that CBCC only compiles C++.
>
>
Well, maybe it does c. But why not do C programmer style and compile groups
of files in separate statements. Are you familar with the 'make' utility in
the C/C++ world?

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