Hi,

For those of us still using 10.6 (whether real or virtualised): is there an 
advantage of gcc49 over gcc48? I think I read something about better 
optimisation somewhere, but is that noticeable enough to warrant spending the 
time of building and installing gcc49? Would that at least give some advantage 
when there's a libgcc update because that's a subport of gcc49 nowadays? Is the 
compiler itself faster?

And what about gcc48, will I be able to uninstall it without having to rebuild 
the ports I built with it, because that is apparently registered as a 
dependency nowadays? (kfilemetadata is among them, while according to the 
CMakeCache.txt file in the build dir that I kept, it's been built with Apple's 
clang 3.0 ...)

BTW, I've noticed subtle but fatal issues with what I'll call header confusion 
between gcc-4.9 and clang-3.5 on Linux. I don't know about clang-3.4 (which I 
have and use in MacPorts) but I'd hate to bump into those on OS X too...

TIA,
René
_______________________________________________
macports-users mailing list
macports-users@lists.macosforge.org
https://lists.macosforge.org/mailman/listinfo/macports-users

Reply via email to