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authorBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2020-02-13 12:29:41 +0200
committerBoris Kolpackov <boris@codesynthesis.com>2020-02-13 12:29:41 +0200
commit626555724d735e94fbd56491417133a986ab8187 (patch)
tree8b199f1c01a9f58b31fd1231147bf2dbcfc7fc45 /doc/intro.cli
parentd86948e87cbb368171037b606352cd0839da243b (diff)
Note bdep-new --type,source sub-option in introduction
Diffstat (limited to 'doc/intro.cli')
-rw-r--r--doc/intro.cli26
1 files changed, 17 insertions, 9 deletions
diff --git a/doc/intro.cli b/doc/intro.cli
index 5abdf04..2e28cdf 100644
--- a/doc/intro.cli
+++ b/doc/intro.cli
@@ -136,7 +136,7 @@ customary \i{\"Hello, World!\"} program (here we assume our current working
directory is \c{/tmp}):
\
-$ bdep new -t exe -l c++ hello
+$ bdep new -l c++ -t exe hello
created new executable project hello in /tmp/hello/
\
@@ -556,7 +556,7 @@ $ b
For a new project:
\
-$ bdep new -t exe -l c++ hello
+$ bdep new -l c++ -t exe hello
$ cd hello
$ bdep init -C ../hello-gcc @gcc cc config.cxx=g++
$ b
@@ -566,7 +566,7 @@ If you prefer, the \c{new} and \c{init} steps can be combined into a single
command:
\
-$ bdep new -t exe -l c++ hello -C hello-gcc @gcc cc config.cxx=g++
+$ bdep new -l c++ -t exe hello -C hello-gcc @gcc cc config.cxx=g++
\
And if you need to deinitialize a project in one or more build configurations,
@@ -612,7 +612,7 @@ consistent. Here is an example of this streamlined project creation workflow
$ git clone .../hello.git
$ cd hello
-$ bdep new -t exe -l c++
+$ bdep new -l c++ -t exe
\
While we have managed to test a couple of platforms (Linux and Windows) and
@@ -827,7 +827,7 @@ contain the \c{libhello} library version \c{1.0.X} that was generated using
the following \l{bdep-new(1)} command line:
\
-$ bdep new -t lib -l c++ libhello
+$ bdep new -l c++ -t lib libhello
\
It can be used as a predictable test dependency when setting up new projects.|
@@ -1621,7 +1621,7 @@ Let's start with a separate project since it is simpler. As the first step we
use \l{bdep-new(1)} to create a new library project next to our \c{hello}:
\
-$ bdep new -t lib -l c++ libhello
+$ bdep new -l c++ -t lib libhello
created new library project libhello in /tmp/libhello/
$ ls
@@ -1751,7 +1751,7 @@ as a package inside an already existing project:
\
$ cd hello
-$ bdep new --package -t lib -l c++ libhello
+$ bdep new --package -l c++ -t lib libhello
created new library package libhello in /tmp/hello/libhello/
\
@@ -2174,7 +2174,7 @@ unpkg-clang/
you can create and install one with these commands:
\
-$ bdep new -t lib -l c++ libextra -C libextra-gcc cc config.cxx=g++
+$ bdep new -l c++ -t lib libextra -C libextra-gcc cc config.cxx=g++
$ b install: libextra-gcc/ config.install.root=/tmp/unpkg-gcc
\
@@ -2562,6 +2562,14 @@ With the header inclusion paths adjusted accordingly:
#include <libstud/url/url.hxx>
\
+The \l{bdep-new(1)} command provides the \c{source} project type sub-option
+that allows us to customize the source subdirectory within a project. For
+example:
+
+\
+$ bdep new -l c++ -t lib,source=libstud/path libstud-path
+\
+
|
\h#proj-struct-src-name|Source Naming|
@@ -2801,7 +2809,7 @@ defaults, however, can be overridden with \c{no-tests} and \c{unit-tests}
options, respectively. For example:
\
-$ bdep new -t lib,unit-tests -l c++ libhello
+$ bdep new -l c++ -t lib,unit-tests libhello
\
The rationale behind these defaults is that if a functionality can be tested