Mail Archives: djgpp/1998/07/22/14:11:00
>>Yes, you can do that. But what if you don't want to. For instance if I
>>recieve a source from someone that simply needs compiling, I don't want to
>>create a project and import all the stuff, set up directories, the correct
>>working resolution etc. I just want to load it up and run it. Other
editors
>>can do this, why not RHIDE?
>
>Sorry, but isn't this what 'make' is for? RHIDE is an IDE -- a
>*development* environment. And it works perfectly well for developing
>projects. Make works perfectly well for compiling already written
>software.
RHIDE is great for developing multi-source projects. That is what I use it
for. But surely it is possible to *develop* single files with an IDE as
well? How can you use make to edit a single file (which is what I was on
about in the first place)? And I think you'll agree that an RHIDE project is
far easier to manage than a makefile... (especially if you don't know how to
program makefiles). And some IDEs can create makefiles from their projects.
James Arthur
jaa AT arfa DOT clara DOT net
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