On 18 November 2010 00:37, Henk-Jan van Tuyl hjgt...@chello.nl wrote:
If you use MinGW, your compiled program depends on mingwm10.dll (depending
on the version of MinGW).
Is this true in general or only when you have bindings pulling it in?
The MinGW site and other places found in a search
On Thu, 18 Nov 2010 09:45:54 +0100, Stephen Tetley
stephen.tet...@gmail.com wrote:
On 18 November 2010 00:37, Henk-Jan van Tuyl hjgt...@chello.nl wrote:
If you use MinGW, your compiled program depends on mingwm10.dll
(depending
on the version of MinGW).
Is this true in general or only
On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 01:39:40 +0100, Michael Litchard mich...@schmong.org
wrote:
I think I may have borked things good using cygwin. I want to remove
it and do a clean install of haskell platform w/out cygwin. What do I
need to do to make sure all configuration files have been removed?
There
On 17 November 2010 15:47, Henk-Jan van Tuyl hjgt...@chello.nl wrote:
On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 01:39:40 +0100, Michael Litchard mich...@schmong.org
wrote:
I think I may have borked things good using cygwin. I want to remove
it and do a clean install of haskell platform w/out cygwin. What do I
Cygwin is fine for development - the shell is Bash (this can probably
be changed), so it is much more capable than the MS shell. Personally
I've never needed to uninstall Cygwin, if things get in a mess
re-running the Cygwin installer seems to sort things out.
One caveat is that if you want to
On Wed, 17 Nov 2010 22:38:54 +0100, Stephen Tetley
stephen.tet...@gmail.com wrote:
One caveat is that if you want to build Haskell bindings to C
libraries, MinGW+MSys is preferable to Cygwin. Cygwin shared libraries
depend on the cygwin.dll which generally isn't what you want for
bindings.