Tzafrir Cohen wrote: > > Most files can be either dos or unix, but some (notably shell scripts) > must be unix. > C source and header files too. For most lines, a new line or a carriage return followed by a line feed are the same in C, so it is not trivial to spot the difference. It does show up when you start using line continuation macros:
#define A "a line"\ "followed by another line" If this file is under a Unix encoding, it will work fine on both platforms. If it's under a Windows encoding, under Unix the compiler will assume that the back slash escapes the carriage return, which leaves the new line unescaped, and the file will not compile (at least on some compilers). > > BTW: another crazy way to convert source files between dos and unix > formats is to store them in an SVN repository and check them out > separately in each environment. > That only works if you set the svn:eol-style svn property to "native". This does not happen automatically. svn propset svn:eol-style native {list of C source and header files, or whatever} Be sure not to set this property on the Visual Studio solution files, as it may well corrupt them. Shachar _______________________________________________ Haifux mailing list Haifux@haifux.org http://hamakor.org.il/cgi-bin/mailman/listinfo/haifux