On Monday 13 November 2006 14:07, Kevin Mark wrote: > On Mon, Nov 13, 2006 at 01:36:18PM +0530, Amit Joshi wrote: > > On Monday 13 November 2006 12:53, Amit Joshi wrote: > > > On Monday 13 November 2006 12:23, Alan Ianson wrote: > > > <trimmed> > > > > > > > Do you have the linux-kernel-headers package installed for your > > > > kernel version? > > > > > > Ok. It wasn't installed. I will install it and reply back. > > > > Ok. I installed the kernel-headers package for my kernel version but > > nothing happened. Still I get the same error message. > > > > I wonder if I need to manually change some settings with GCC? > > -- > > Regards, > > Hi Amit, > when investigating a problem, do not start out with the most complex > environment but instead start with the smallest, simplest bits and build > from there to see what caused the problems. Thus: > 1) create a simple 1 line c program > 2) compile this with 'gcc' > 3) when this works > 4) try using the simple program in the big fancy IDE and compile it > 5) when this works, try using your big, complex program. > > Also, if possible, show us either the full C program or a part of it, so > that we can spot any error in it that would create the error. It also > allows us to try that program on our myriad computers to see it the > problem is reproduceable. The Scientific method and Debian love to be > able to reproduce results. It gives us the warm fuzzies. > Cheers, > Kev
First of all, thanks all of you. Kevin, thats a good suggestion. I will keep that in mind for my further posts. :) Well..I have now started using Debian after so many years. The 'build-essential' package is exactly what I wanted. :) Thanks for the hint. -- Regards, Amit. Remember fellas, what we do in life echoes in eternity! -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]