On Mar 27, 2017, at 2:10 PM, Jan Neumüller via swift-users 
<swift-users@swift.org> wrote:
> 
> Is it just me, or is Swift moving to much in a command line direction since 
> the open sourcing? I feel being left behind as an Xcode user...
> 
> Jan
> 


you can specify flags in Xcode - Xcode basically just wraps around command line 
tools anyways for the most part (when it comes to compiling)
Best,
Josh

>> On 27 Mar 2017, at 22:59, Michael Ilseman via swift-users 
>> <swift-users@swift.org> wrote:
>> 
>> Sure. At a low level, you can create a module.map file and use -L/-l flags 
>> in your invocation of Swift. If you want to do so at a higher level, then 
>> perhaps SwiftPM can. CCing swift-build-dev for the SwiftPM part.
>> 
>> 
>>> On Mar 26, 2017, at 3:20 PM, Kelvin Ma via swift-users 
>>> <swift-users@swift.org> wrote:
>>> 
>>> Idk if this has been asked before, but is there a way to import C libraries 
>>> into a Swift project without creating a local git repo? Preferably 
>>> something similar to C where you can just `#include` headers and then 
>>> specify the link flags (in Package.swift?) 
>>> 
>>> It’s getting very cumbersome to make a bunch of empty git repos just to use 
>>> libglfw or libcairo.
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>> 
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