I guess you're referring to the act of using Eclipse itself as an
editor? I think this works fine for coding, but I'm equally interested
in making an editor available for things like "edit your
/etc/foo/bar.txt". Eclipse editors only operate on files which are
contained inside a project known to t
Eclipse + Laika Scratchbox plugin - outside looking in
Sean
On 7/26/06, Matt Hoosier <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
I'm a little uncertian on the mechanism by which the hostcc process
dynamically links against the host's C (and other system) libraries.
Can the same mechanism be exploited to make so
Sure, this works too. I'm hoping to make this a little more
transparent to the users, though.
On 7/26/06, Murray Cumming <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:
> I'm a little uncertian on the mechanism by which the hostcc process
> dynamically links against the host's C (and other system) libraries.
> Can
> I'm a little uncertian on the mechanism by which the hostcc process
> dynamically links against the host's C (and other system) libraries.
> Can the same mechanism be exploited to make something like Gtk+ and
> libx11 available to devkit tools?
>
> I'm searching for a way to get a GUI text edito
I'm a little uncertian on the mechanism by which the hostcc process
dynamically links against the host's C (and other system) libraries.
Can the same mechanism be exploited to make something like Gtk+ and
libx11 available to devkit tools?
I'm searching for a way to get a GUI text editor available