_VERSION_MINOR 6)
-set(CMake_VERSION_PATCH 20160813)
+set(CMake_VERSION_PATCH 20160814)
#set(CMake_VERSION_RC 1)
---
Summary of changes:
Source/CMakeVersion.cmake |2 +-
1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-)
hooks/
On Sat, Aug 13, 2016 at 6:43 PM Elizabeth A. Fischer <
elizabeth.fisc...@columbia.edu> wrote:
> I would look into Anaconda, which does work for Windows. Its version
> management is not as well developed as Spack, but it's more cross-platform.
>
> Auto-builders are just coming into their own,
Typically Windows applications (eg. MSVC compiler) use current console's
codepage for output to pipes so we need to encode that to internally used
encoding (KWSYS_ENCODING_DEFAULT_CODEPAGE).
---
Source/CMakeLists.txt | 2 +
Source/ProcessOutput.hxx.in| 160
Wow I actually completely forgot about that lol. I think I was looking
into it for some other reasons, not related to work. I will have to
look into it again. I don't really remember much about it.
Thanks for the reminder.
On Sat, Aug 13, 2016 at 7:02 PM, Ruslan Baratov
Hi, Robert
According to your GitHub account you've send a trivial patch about a
year ago to the Hunter (https://github.com/ruslo/hunter) package
manager. So I wonder what is your experience, have you tried it? Have
you run into some troubles?
Thanks, Ruslo
On 12-Aug-16 22:59, Robert Dailey
I would look into Anaconda, which does work for Windows. Its version
management is not as well developed as Spack, but it's more cross-platform.
Auto-builders are just coming into their own, it's a brave new world. I
expect things to be more complete in a few years.
-- Elizabeth
On Sat, Aug
I would look into Anaconda, which does work for Windows. Its version
management is not as well developed as Spack, but it's more cross-platform.
Auto-builders are just coming into their own, it's a brave new world. I
expect things to be more complete in a few years.
-- Elizabeth
On Sat, Aug
I did some brief digging into spack, and it doesn't look like it
supports Windows. All I see are shell scripts and the documentation
uses POSIX.
If I'm going to use a package manager, it needs to be able to support
Android (ARM), Windows, and Linux. I have specific toolchains that
I'll need the
I did some brief digging into spack, and it doesn't look like it
supports Windows. All I see are shell scripts and the documentation
uses POSIX.
If I'm going to use a package manager, it needs to be able to support
Android (ARM), Windows, and Linux. I have specific toolchains that
I'll need the