Metadata-Version: 2.1
Name: compiletools
Version: 4.1.85
Summary: Tools to make compiling C/C++ projects easy
Home-page: http://zomojo.github.io/compiletools/
Author: Zomojo Pty Ltd
Author-email: drgeoffathome@gmail.com
License: GPLv3+
Download-URL: https://github.com/Zomojo/compiletools/archive/v4.1.85.tar.gz
Keywords: c++ make development
Platform: UNKNOWN
Classifier: Development Status :: 5 - Production/Stable
Classifier: Intended Audience :: Developers
Classifier: Topic :: Software Development :: Build Tools
Classifier: License :: OSI Approved :: GNU General Public License v3 or later (GPLv3+)
Classifier: Programming Language :: Python :: 3
Requires-Python: >=3.6
License-File: LICENSE.txt

.. image:: https://travis-ci.org/Zomojo/compiletools.svg?branch=master
    :target: https://travis-ci.org/Zomojo/compiletools

============
compiletools
============

--------------------------------------------------------
C/C++ build tools that requires almost no configuration.
--------------------------------------------------------

:Author: drgeoffathome@gmail.com
:Date:   2016-08-09
:Copyright: Copyright (C) 2011-2016 Zomojo Pty Ltd
:Version: 4.1.85
:Manual section: 1
:Manual group: developers

SYNOPSIS
========
    ct-* [compilation args] [filename.cpp] [--variant=<VARIANT>]

DESCRIPTION
===========
The various ct-* tools exist to build C/C++ executables with almost no 
configuration. For example, to build a C or C++ program, type ::

    ct-cake --auto

which will try to determine the correct source files to generate executables
from and also determine the tests to build and run.

A variant is a configuration file that specifies various configurable settings
like the compiler and compiler flags. Common variants are "debug" and "release".

Options are parsed using python-configargparse.  This means they can be passed
in on the command line, as environment variables or in config files.
Command-line values override environment variables which override config file 
values which override defaults. Note that the environment variables are 
captilized. That is, a command line option of --magic=cpp is the equivalent of 
an environment variable MAGIC=cpp.

If the option itself starts with a hypen then configargparse can fail to parse 
it as you intended. For example, on many platforms, :: 

    --append-CXXFLAGS=-march=skylake

will fail. To work around this, compiletools postprocesses the options to 
understand quotes. For example, :: 

    --append-CXXFLAGS="-march=skylake" 

will work on all platforms.  Note however that many shells (e.g., bash) will strip 
quotes so you need to escape the quotes or single quote stop the shell preprocessing. 
For example, ::

    --append-CXXFLAGS=\\"-march=skylake\\"  
    or 
    --append-CXXFLAGS='"-march=skylake"'

Other notable tools are ::

    * ct-headertree: provides information about structure of the include files
    * ct-filelist:   provides the list of files needed to be included in a tarball (e.g. for packaging)

SEE ALSO
========
* ct-build
* ct-build-dynamic-library
* ct-build-static-library
* ct-cache
* ct-cache-clean
* ct-cake
* ct-cmakelists
* ct-commandline
* ct-config
* ct-cppdeps
* ct-create-cmakelists
* ct-create-makefile
* ct-filelist
* ct-findtargets
* ct-gitroot
* ct-headertree
* ct-jobs
* ct-list-variants
* ct-magicflags


