On Sun, 11 May 1997, Peter Gerwinski wrote:
According to Jan-Jaap van der Heijden:
To Peter: since this GPC is searching for this obsolete 'djgpp.lnk', I assume you are indeed using v2.0. In that case you'd better upgrade to 2.01 to stop this confusion.
I was sure that I am using v2.01, but I re-installed my `djdev201.zip' and `gcc2721b.zip', thus the new Alpha gpc-970510 should definitly (?) be v2.01.
Well, gpc alpha 05/10 still says "ld: can't find djgpp.lnk" BUT, "gpc -v" says "2.0(2.7.2.1)" and not an alpha version number. Did I install it right? I think so. gpc2.0 (non alpha) used to work fine.
"gcc -v" reports 2.7.2.1 and works. (compiles hello.c ;) /djgpp/manifest has djdev201.mft, so I think I have djgpp v2.01. I only started using djgpp after 2.01 came out. Is there any other way to find out? (yes, seems like a newbie question ;)
I checked my path, and djgpp's ld.exe seems to be the one that gets executed (I also have fpk-pascal, which has an older version). Is there any way I can check version numbers (compared to what?) of these?
Can I do something like "gpc --"keep all temporary files" and examine those? What would I be looking for??
I tried both command line, and rhide.
I (currently) don't have the disk space to install the source tree, and the files created while compiling. <sniff> so I can't check that.
On a side note: gpc.inf doesn't work (no top node) But gpc.inf and gpc.i1 both reference and contain a top node. I can't see why "info --file gpc.inf" complains...
gcc.inf/gcc.i1 look the same (at least in structure) and work.
Greetings,
Peter
Dipl.-Phys. Peter Gerwinski, Essen, Germany, free physicist and programmer peter.gerwinski@uni-essen.de - http://home.pages.de/~peter.gerwinski/ [970201] maintainer GNU Pascal [970510] - http://home.pages.de/~gnu-pascal/ [970125]
Cheers Berend De Schouwer.