On Mar 10, 11:19 pm, John Doty <j...@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
> wrote:
> brian....@[EMAIL PROTECTED]
wrote:
> > Hello GForth experts,
>
> > I have inherited a 'hand-me-down' Dual G5 from my wife, the graphic
> > designer (ellyfox.com). I of course had to install the newest Xcode
> > tools for the Leopard version of OS/X. And of course I don't know
> > very much about C. I have built GForth in the past using the command
> > line. (Even I can type 'make' :-) )
>
> The easy way is to install Fink (http://www.finkproject.org/).
That's a
> Unix open source software im****tation system for MacOSX. Then just "fink
> install gforth" from the command line.
>
> --
> John Doty, Noqsi Aerospace, Ltd.http://www.noqsi.com/
> --
> History teaches that logical consistency is neither sufficient nor
> necessary to establish practical, real world truth. Those who attempt to
> use logic for that purpose are abusing it.
Thanks John, I was looking at the Fink site and didn't understand the
need. GForth will compile perfectly at the command line on OS/X with
just 'make'. I will look closer at Fink to understand it better.
I was trying to understand this fancy development suite, Xcode, and
maybe, just maybe at some point get a window to open with gforth
running like win32forth.
After that's done, I was wondering if we could help our the Power Mops
people by building Mike's system on top of a "Mac Gforth". It
wouldn't be native code but at least it would be running an Intel
Binary on the new Macs.
I am dreaming in technicolour for my 'C' skill-set but it seems
doable.
Brian


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