Hi,

On 19/12/2018 11:21 am, Christoph Kukulies wrote:
Thanks. I have Xcode installed and I’m developing an App presently. I need to 
run a small server on my mac as well and I thought the best would be to run it 
in a terminal and compile it with a C-compiler of choice. Need not to be gcc. 
Just the default one. And thanks Ruben for the tip using the CPATH variable.

You should not need to set CPATH to find the standard system includes.

If you are still having problems, you need to provide more information for anyone to help. Exactly what commands are you running, and exactly what errors does that give, etc.

Chris


—
Christoph

Am 19.12.2018 um 11:48 schrieb Chris Jones <[email protected]>:

Hi,

First things first. Do you really need GCC ? The primary compilers in macOS are 
now based on clang, and I recommend you use these instead of GCC for a number 
of reasons. To have access to these you need to make sure you have Xcode etc. 
installed. see

https://guide.macports.org/chunked/installing.html#installing.xcode

For details related to using these compilers with MacPorts.

Chris

On 19/12/2018 8:32 am, Christoph Kukulies wrote:
Does it require a special package to be installed when one wants to develop 
under cc or gcc in macOS?
I was writing a little C program starting with
#include <sys/types.h>
and the compiler doesn’t find anything (what I would be normally under 
/usr/include
—
Christoph

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