Hello Bill,

So you are saying that if I have both the 32 bit compiler and 64 bit
compiler installed on 64 bit windows, I will be able to create both 32 bit
and 64 bit applications if I use the appropriate Visual Studio generator?

I am not exactly sure what your last statement about not being able to do
the cross compile thing meant?

Regards,

Juan

On Wed, Oct 7, 2009 at 9:50 PM, Bill Hoffman <bill.hoff...@kitware.com>wrote:

> j s wrote:
>
>> On 64-bit windows with CMAKE, how do you choose whether to use the 32 bit
>> or 64 bit visual c++ compiler for the visual studio generator? I am thinking
>> about starting to cross compile both 64 bit and 32 bit version of the
>> software, but all I have right now is the 32 bit compiler.
>>
>> They are separate generators:
>
> cmake --help
> ...
>  Visual Studio 8 2005        = Generates Visual Studio .NET 2005 project
>                                files.
>  Visual Studio 8 2005 Win64  = Generates Visual Studio .NET 2005 Win64
>                                project files.
>  Visual Studio 9 2008        = Generates Visual Studio 9 2008 project
> files.
>  Visual Studio 9 2008 Win64  = Generates Visual Studio 9 2008 Win64 project
>                                files.
>
> Currently CMake can not do the cross compile thing on windows with vs
> projects.
>
> -Bill
>
>
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