From: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
From: Billinghurst, David (CALCRTS)
gcc uses the complex math functions from the system libraries,
(excluding builtins). They aren't in newlib, so cygwin
doesn't have them.
I, too, would like them as they are required by gfortran.
which will be
(is) the
From: Billinghurst, David (CALCRTS)
gcc uses the complex math functions from the system libraries,
(excluding builtins). They aren't in newlib, so cygwin doesn't have them.
I, too, would like them as they are required by gfortran, which will be
(is) the fortran compiler in gcc-3.5.
At 01:52 PM 7/15/2004, you wrote:
From: Billinghurst, David (CALCRTS)
gcc uses the complex math functions from the system libraries,
(excluding builtins). They aren't in newlib, so cygwin doesn't have them.
I, too, would like them as they are required by gfortran, which will be
(is) the
On Thu, Jul 15, 2004 at 04:13:16PM -0400, Larry Hall wrote:
At 01:52 PM 7/15/2004, you wrote:
From: Billinghurst, David (CALCRTS)
gcc uses the complex math functions from the system libraries,
(excluding builtins). They aren't in newlib, so cygwin doesn't have them.
I, too, would like them
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm trying to port a program to cygwin that uses the C99 complex
number standard and the complex.h library (carg, csin, etc.).
According to the gcc web page, this is mostly implemented in gcc 3.0
and above, but I can't find it in the cygwin gcc package. Is this on
On Thu, Jul 15, 2004 at 09:38:12AM +1000, Billinghurst, David (CALCRTS) wrote:
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
I'm trying to port a program to cygwin that uses the C99 complex number
standard and the complex.h library (carg, csin, etc.). According to
the gcc web page, this is mostly implemented in gcc
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