Zitat von Alan W. Irwin ir...@beluga.phys.uvic.ca:
On 2009-10-01 19:51-0400 Bill Lorensen wrote:
I think if you specify each arg as a string it should work as expected.
-L/usr/lib -lcairo
To generalize that idea, I have discovered since my post that if I
transform the blank delimited string
On 2009-10-02 08:58+0200 Hendrik Sattler wrote:
Zitat von Alan W. Irwin ir...@beluga.phys.uvic.ca:
[Use]
string(REGEX REPLACE ; CAIRO_LINK_FLAGS_LIST ${CAIRO_LINK_FLAGS})
[to convert a blank-delimited string to a list].
Doing this REGEX REPLACE cannot be the recommended way as that breaks
On 2009-10-02 06:26+0200 Andreas Pakulat wrote:
On 01.10.09 18:18:24, Alan W. Irwin wrote:
This solution obviously reduces the urgency of the concern I expressed about
the motivation for escaping blanks for Linux because workarounds like above
can always be used. However, I am still curious
Hi.
Alan W. Irwin
ir...@beluga.phys.uvic.ca writes:
On 2009-10-02 08:58+0200 Hendrik Sattler wrote:
Zitat von Alan W. Irwin ir...@beluga.phys.uvic.ca:
[Use]
string(REGEX REPLACE ; CAIRO_LINK_FLAGS_LIST ${CAIRO_LINK_FLAGS})
[to convert a blank-delimited string to a list].
Doing this
Zitat von Claudio Bley b_l_...@ml1.net:
set(a hello world\\ hello world)
message(STATUS a = ${a})
set(a_list ${a})
message(STATUS a_list = ${a_list})
The result is
-- a = hello world\ hello world
-- a_list = hello world\ hello world
So, the real issue here is that your CAIRO_LINK_FLAGS
Hendrik Sattler p...@hendrik-sattler.de
writes:
Zitat von Claudio Bley b_l_...@ml1.net:
set(a hello world\\ hello world)
message(STATUS a = ${a})
set(a_list ${a})
message(STATUS a_list = ${a_list})
The result is
-- a = hello world\ hello world
-- a_list = hello world\ hello world
So,
Zitat von Claudio Bley b_l_...@ml1.net:
But I think that his example is wrong, it should be:
set(a -Lfoo -lbar)
message(STATUS a = ${a})
set(a_list ${a})
message(STATUS a_list = ${a_list})
Then the result should be
-- a = -Lfoo -lbar
-- a_list = -Lfoo;-lbar
No, should it not. How should
Hendrik Sattler p...@hendrik-sattler.de
writes:
Zitat von Claudio Bley b_l_...@ml1.net:
But I think that his example is wrong, it should be:
set(a -Lfoo -lbar)
message(STATUS a = ${a})
set(a_list ${a})
message(STATUS a_list = ${a_list})
Then the result should be
-- a = -Lfoo -lbar
--
On 2009-10-02 14:45+0200 Hendrik Sattler wrote:
Zitat von Claudio Bley b_l_...@ml1.net:
But I think that his example is wrong, it should be:
set(a -Lfoo -lbar)
message(STATUS a = ${a})
set(a_list ${a})
message(STATUS a_list = ${a_list})
Then the result should be
-- a = -Lfoo -lbar
-- a_list =
Alan W. Irwin wrote:
\
As for your request to explain why the second and third results are
identical, I leave that to those who understand how and why CMake has been
implemented in the way it has. I am not in that group, which is why I
always
fall back to simple experiments like above to
First, to give some background for the question in the subject line, we have
implemented OCaml language support for PLplot using custom commands. One
issue with that support however, is that if a CMake variable is a
blank-delimited string and used as part of a custom COMMAND, then in the
command
I think if you specify each arg as a string it should work as expected.
-L/usr/lib -lcairo
On Thu, Oct 1, 2009 at 6:47 PM, Alan W. Irwin ir...@beluga.phys.uvic.ca wrote:
First, to give some background for the question in the subject line, we have
implemented OCaml language support for PLplot
On 01.10.09 18:18:24, Alan W. Irwin wrote:
This solution obviously reduces the urgency of the concern I expressed about
the motivation for escaping blanks for Linux because workarounds like above
can always be used. However, I am still curious about what the motivation
is for escaping blanks
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