Hi Miles,
thanks for the explanation. I had never hear of the SHORTNAME
attribute before, this is good to know.
nick
On Thu, Oct 11, 2012 at 9:20 PM, Miles Bader wrote:
> Nicolas Bock writes:
>> libsomething_la_CPPFLAGS = -I../../
> ...
>> the naming changed from a.F90
trange.
nick
On Thu, Oct 11, 2012 at 11:51 AM, Nicolas Bock wrote:
> Hello list,
>
> I am using libtool to compile a library of a bunch of F90 files. Those
> files have various dependencies between them and since automake is not
> capable of tracking those for Fortran I have to b
Hello list,
I am using libtool to compile a library of a bunch of F90 files. Those
files have various dependencies between them and since automake is not
capable of tracking those for Fortran I have to by hand add lines like
a.lo : b.lo c.lo
to Makefile.am. Unfortunately automake's naming conven
Hello list,
I can't figure out how to exclude some source files I generate with a script
in the dist.
The problem it seems is that I list the generated sources in the _SOURCES
variable and the dist target automatically includes them. But I need to
rebuild the sources at compile time of the packag
Thanks all for the suggestions. I will give it a try...
nick
On Mon, Nov 15, 2010 at 14:08, Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
> Hi Nicolas,
>
> * Nicolas Bock wrote on Mon, Nov 15, 2010 at 05:11:26PM CET:
>> (1) I can use C++ and rewrite the function header as a template.
>> (2) I c
Hello list,
I have some functions written in C that take a floating point argument, e.g.
void foos (float x);
void food (double x);
The function bodies are basically identical except of course for the
different floating point types. In order to avoid having to write
redundant code, I see 2 optio
Thanks
On Thu, Jan 14, 2010 at 16:24, Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
> Hello Nicolas,
>
> * Nicolas Bock wrote on Thu, Jan 14, 2010 at 11:42:47PM CET:
> > > * Nicolas Bock wrote on Wed, Jan 13, 2010 at 08:41:35PM CET:
> > > > on Ubuntu 8.04 I find that if I specif
las,
>
> * Nicolas Bock wrote on Wed, Jan 13, 2010 at 08:41:35PM CET:
> > on Ubuntu 8.04 I find that if I specify CC when I run configure, the
> > configure script dies when it runs config.sub. I get this output
> >
> > $ CC=/usr/local/gcc-4.3.0/bin/gcc ./config.guess
> > x86_6
Thanks, I forwarded my original question.
nick
On Wed, Jan 13, 2010 at 13:06, Ralf Wildenhues wrote:
> Hello Nicolas,
>
> * Nicolas Bock wrote on Wed, Jan 13, 2010 at 08:41:35PM CET:
> > on Ubuntu 8.04 I find that if I specify CC when I run configure, the
> > configure scr
Hello list,
on Ubuntu 8.04 I find that if I specify CC when I run configure, the
configure script dies when it runs config.sub. I get this output
$ CC=/usr/local/gcc-4.3.0/bin/gcc ./config.guess
x86_64-unknown-linux-
but when I run with the system compiler (gcc 4.2.4):
$ ./config.guess
x86_64-u
Hi John,
thanks for the advice. I thought there might be a mechanism built into
automake and autoconf to express this paradigm, but the command line
option solution is great!
Thanks, nick
On Thu, 2009-07-09 at 11:39 -0600, John Calcote wrote:
> Hi Nicolas,
>
> On 7/9/2009 11:13 AM
Hello list,
I have the following problem: I want to add an external package to our
own package. The external package is already configured in the sense
that its maintainer ran "make dist" and I simply untared the tar file
into some directory underneath our source tree. I add that directory to
AC_C
Thanks for the help
On Wed, 2008-01-23 at 22:50 +, Harlan Stenn wrote:
> Nick,
>
> > I wrote a Makefile.am which includes a source file called b.C, which is
> > a C-source and not a C++-source. In configure.ac I have AC_PROG_CC. When
> > I run automake I get the error message:
> >
> > Makef
Hello list,
I wrote a Makefile.am which includes a source file called b.C, which is
a C-source and not a C++-source. In configure.ac I have AC_PROG_CC. When
I run automake I get the error message:
Makefile.am: C++ source seen but `CXX' is undefined
Makefile.am: The usual way to define `CXX' is
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