On Fri, 1 Jun 2001, Paul Johnson wrote:
> What version of Perl are you using? If it is from ActiveState then you
> may need to match your environment somewhat to the environment under
> which that perl was built. I think this means you will need Visual C++
> and nmake, but it may now be possibl
On Thu, May 31, 2001 at 09:13:23AM -0700, C.Ouellette wrote:
> I believe I should have added that I am currently in a
> Windows NT environment.
My condolences. But at least you're not using 95 or 98. Then you
really would have problems.
> So I guess the follow-up question would be which of
-start-
> "C.Ouellette" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
>at05/31/2001 11:13 AM
>So I guess the follow-up question would be which of
>the two (XS & Inline) work better under Windows.
>XS does not specify if it works under Windows. Inline
>does, but I have not tried to compile it yet.
I've installed, t
Thank you for the previous information.
I believe I should have added that I am currently in a
Windows NT environment.
So I guess the follow-up question would be which of
the two (XS & Inline) work better under Windows.
XS does not specify if it works under Windows. Inline
does, but I have n
--- "C.Ouellette" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I need to be able to write a a perl script to either
> include or use previously written C programs and
> API's.
>
> There are a few modules out there to do that. I am
> looking into using either SWIG or Inline. I'm not
> sure which one would be t
On Thu, May 31, 2001 at 06:36:28AM -0700, C.Ouellette wrote:
> I need to be able to write a a perl script to either
> include or use previously written C programs and
> API's.
>
> There are a few modules out there to do that. I am
> looking into using either SWIG or Inline. I'm not
> sure which