Hello Bill,
Thanks for your mail. I can see you are in the user support
business too ;-) "Please make a simple example". OK, you are right.
Here what I have done. I have made the simplest possible example (see
files attached). I installed the latest version from cvs and now I
have had s
Carminati Federico wrote:
Hello,
I am very interested in this issue and I have done some tests. There
is a problem with cmake (see
http://public.kitware.com/Bug/view.php?id=7389), where fortran flags are
assigned to C compiler during Xcode generation. There is another "more
obscure" proble
Hello,
I am very interested in this issue and I have done some tests.
There is a problem with cmake (see http://public.kitware.com/Bug/view.php?id=7389)
, where fortran flags are assigned to C compiler during Xcode
generation. There is another "more obscure" problem (see http://public.kitw
The Intel C++ and Fortran compilers add some Xcode plugins I believe
when they are installed.
_
Mike Jackson [EMAIL PROTECTED]
www.bluequartz.net
On Oct 14, 2008, at 8:28 PM, Bill Hoffman wrote:
Dick Munr
Dick Munroe wrote:
Bill, Well, Xcode certainly supports Fortran well enough with the Intel
10.1 preview compiler to successfully build and install software using
Xcode, so I'm not sure what you mean by "doesn't support Fortran" unless
it's dependency stuff. So if the Intel fortran compiler work
Bill, Well, Xcode certainly supports Fortran well enough with the Intel
10.1 preview compiler to successfully build and install software using
Xcode, so I'm not sure what you mean by "doesn't support Fortran" unless
it's dependency stuff. So if the Intel fortran compiler works (and I
have an ex
Michael Jackson wrote:
I can not comment on the Xcode stuff BUT have you tried to build your
application using plain makefiles. I know it isn't as nice as an IDE BUT
if it works with Makefiles then the problem is definitely one with Xcode
project generation and not CMake in general.
Also, if
I can not comment on the Xcode stuff BUT have you tried to build your
application using plain makefiles. I know it isn't as nice as an IDE
BUT if it works with Makefiles then the problem is definitely one with
Xcode project generation and not CMake in general.
Also, if you are not tied to X
Don't seem to play together well.
I'm trying to use CMake because I've got a product that needs to be
build on Windows, Mac OS X and Linux. I got the Windows port to CMake
done and am trying to get the Mac OS X version up in Xcode. The
configuration runs and creates the product but when any