Thanks for the answers Adam and Richard!

On Mon, Nov 7, 2011 at 4:54 PM, Richard Frith-Macdonald <
[email protected]> wrote:

>
> On 6 Nov 2011, at 19:59, Thanasis Petridis wrote:
>
> > Hello. My name is Thanasis.
> >
> > First of all sorry for my poor english.
> >
> > Secondly, if this is the wrong mailing list or if there is a solution
> for my problem, just tell me which is the correct mailing list or where is
> the answer.
> >
> > I have a PC running on Windows 7 and I want to start programming apps
> for iOS. So I figured out that I should start from learning the Objective-C
> language.
> > So I searched in the Internet and I found that I can program Objective-C
> on windows 7 through GNUstep. I install in the directory c:\GNUstep the
> following 3 setups
> >
> > -gnustep-msys-system-0.28.1-setup
> > -gnustep-core-0.28.0-setup
> > -gnustep-devel-1.3.0-setup
> >
> > I have created a file hello.m in the folder c:\new
> > I started the shell application
> > I wrote c:\new
> > and then I wrote g++ hello.m
>
> This is where you went wrong ... you can't really build code trying to use
> a compiler directly because there are various options, include directories,
> and libraries which need to be used.
> You should use gnustep-make to automate the build process and fill in all
> those options for you.
>
> See http://www.gnustep.it/nicola/Tutorials/WritingMakefiles/index.htmlfor a 
> good starting point.
>
>
>
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