Hi Tima, Thanks for your response.
Sorry for eventual misunderstandings. In the console I can type "make" at which time the GNUmakefile is used and the appropriate environment (and other?) variables, and the thing compiles okay. However, using a "gcc ..." command from the command line, I couldn't make it work. And more important, I have to set the appropriate environment variables, etc. in Eclipse that can be coupled to the gcc compiler. For that I set all the kind of stuff done in GNUstep.sh (that I have sourced indeed), like the $GNUSTEP_..., $GNUSTEP_FLATTENED, $PATH, $CLASSPATH, $GUILE..., just by copying the values from "env". And yes I have the /System/Library/Headers/Foundation files. I hope you can help me. I don't know exactly what is going on behind the scenes of the shell scripts and GNUmakefile. Kind regards, Anne On Wed, 2006-12-13 at 19:49 -0800, Tima Vaisburd wrote: > Hi, > > I just tested your example, it compiles and runs cleanly for me. > That is, nothing wrong with the source.m and GNUmakefile, > it's your installation. > > How did you install? Have you source'd > <your GNUstep root>/System/Library/Makefiles/GNUstep.sh ? > > There should be file > > <your GNUstep root>/System/Library/Headers/Foundation/Foundation.h > > do you have it? > > --Tima > > On Wednesday 13 December 2006 08:27, Anne van Rossum wrote: > > Dear list members, > > > > Currently I'm starting to explore the Objective-C world. I figured out > > to begin with GNUstep. The file I use is "source.m": > > > > #import <Foundation/Foundation.h> > > int main (void) > > { > > NSLog (@"Executing: Hello World!!!"); > > return 0; > > } > > ____________________________________________ > > I'm currently able to type make using this GNUmakefile: > > > > include $(GNUSTEP_MAKEFILES)/common.make > > TOOL_NAME = LogTest > > LogTest_OBJC_FILES = source.m > > include $(GNUSTEP_MAKEFILES)/tool.make > > ____________________________________________ > > However, I can't make it work using gcc: > > > > source.m:1:34: error: Foundation/Foundation.h: No such file or directory > > source.m: In function ‘main’: > > source.m:5: error: cannot find interface declaration for > > ‘NXConstantString’ > > ____________________________________________ > > And more important, but maybe in some way related, I want to run the > > project in Eclipse, CDT. However, the console output is in this case: > > > > make all > > Making all for tool LogTest... > > Linking tool LogTest ... > > /usr/lib/GNUstep/System/Library/Libraries/libgnustep-base_s.a(objc-load.o): > > In function `objc_get_symbol_path': (.text+0x1ef): undefined reference to > > `dlsym' > > /usr/lib/GNUstep/System/Library/Libraries/libgnustep-base_s.a(objc-load.o): > > In function `objc_get_symbol_path': (.text+0x20b): undefined reference to > > `dladdr' > > ... > > ... > > ... > > collect2: ld returned 1 exit status > > make[1]: *** [static_obj/LogTest] Error 1 > > make: *** [LogTest.all.tool.variables] Error 2 > > > > ____________________________________________ > > I already tried to play with Environment variables within the Project > > properties, but am not sure what is needed, and what not. And it seemed > > like I copied every GNUSTEP_... env variable. I downloaded the stuff > > using aptitude search gnustep, and have the libdl.so, libdl.a files > > in /usr/lib. > > ____________________________________________ > > I use GNU Make 3.81, gcc 4.1.2 20060928 (prerelease) (Ubuntu > > 4.1.1-13ubuntu5), Ubuntu Edgy Eft > > > > ____________________________________________ > > I hope someone can help me figure out the settings in Eclipse. I want to > > run it from there. > > > > Thanks a lot in advance. > > > > Kind regards, > > > > Anne > > > > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Help-gnustep mailing list > > Help-gnustep@gnu.org > > http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gnustep _______________________________________________ Help-gnustep mailing list Help-gnustep@gnu.org http://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-gnustep