Code::Blocks Forums
Developer forums (C::B DEVELOPMENT STRICTLY!) => Plugins development => Topic started by: Ceniza on January 11, 2006, 08:00:47 pm
-
I was wondering, how tricky would it be to make the debugger work with single files?
Compiling a single file is no longer a problem, it has been implemented, but allowing that compilation to enable debugging flags would be the tricky thing.
Maybe, just maybe, if there was another "compiler settings" when you're going to compile a single file. We'd get that way "global compiler settings", "global compiler settings per project", "compiler settings per target" and "compiler settings for single file compilation".
What do you think?
-
Maybe, just maybe, if there was another "compiler settings" when you're going to compile a single file. We'd get that way "global compiler settings", "global compiler settings per project", "compiler settings per target" and "compiler settings for single file compilation".
What do you think?
Would it not be a bit too much to have all those "global compiler settings"?
Michael
-
Would it not be a bit too much to have all those "global compiler settings"?
The new one would only be "compiler settings for single file compilation", all others already exist, or was any of those removed lately?
-
May be I have misunderstood.
By "global compiler settings" you mean Settings-->compiler, by "compiler settings per project" Project-->Build options and by "compiler settings per target" Project-->Properties-->Targets, right?
In this case, the addition of "compiler settings for single file compilation" should be a possibility IMHO.
The improved compiler framework (developers only access, if I remeber correctly) will not take into consideration such a case?
Michael
-
By "global compiler settings" you mean Settings-->compiler, by "compiler settings per project" Project-->Build options and by "compiler settings per target" Project-->Properties-->Targets, right?
Right, that's what I meant.
The improved compiler framework (developers only access, if I remeber correctly) will not take into consideration such a case?
I don't remember reading about that in there.