at work we have a bunch of dependencies that we all include in our repo because it's so fucking annoying to get the right version sof all the packages and stuff from nuget
@Puppy That's another thing. The way he's downloading the dependencies right now, it downloads the latest version. This could potentially break the build.
Alternatively, you can upload the dependencies somewhere and then just have them downloaded again, but I don't see the point. What's the rationale behind this? A smaller source tree?
From a pure standpoint you want to keep your deps from your repo separate as they're logically different things. But as Puppy says, that's not always practical.
@ChemiCalChems With CMake you make one CMakeLists and that generates any supported project file, whether it be a Makefile or a Visual Studio project file.
This way you're not locking the developer to an environment of your choosing.
sure, a bunch of smart people could do something better, but the effort involved is tremendous, and there's a shitload of other stuff that needs fixing
it's shit, but not in ways that directly impact me, and it's good in two ways that do matter to me- the language is actually a real language that's readable, and it supports generating build files for multiple systems like VS and make
> \draw (x,y) arc (start:stop:radius); draws an arc with radius radius starts from (x,y) with center (x+r*cos(start+180), y+r*sin(start+180)) and ends at (x+r*cos(start+180)+r*cos(stop), y+r*sin(start+180)+r*sin(stop)).
So ok. If I wanna use a library for my program which I will distribute as CMake, I do have to compile all the libs for the program for every platform supported, am I right?