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Diffstat (limited to 'doc')
-rw-r--r-- | doc/intro.cli | 36 |
1 files changed, 24 insertions, 12 deletions
diff --git a/doc/intro.cli b/doc/intro.cli index d1686a1..79ec41f 100644 --- a/doc/intro.cli +++ b/doc/intro.cli @@ -25,17 +25,11 @@ // - Maximum <pre> line is 70 characters. // -" -\h0#preface|Preface| - -This document is an overall introduction to the \c{build2} toolchain that -shows how the main components, namely the build system, the package dependency -manager, and the project dependency manager are used together to handle the -entire C/C++ project development lifecycle: creation, development, testing, -and delivery. For additional information, including documentation for -individual toolchain components, man pages, etc., refer to the \c{build2} -project \l{https://build2.org/doc.xhtml Documentation} page. - +// Some people say the find the TLDR "abhorrent" (because it doesn't look +// like something they can understand without reading the rest of the doc +// first). +// +/* \h1#tldr|TL;DR| @@ -100,6 +94,20 @@ synchronizing: reconfigure hello/0.1.0 \ +*/ + +" +\h0#preface|Preface| + +This document is an overall introduction to the \c{build2} toolchain that +shows how the main components, namely the build system, the package dependency +manager, and the project dependency manager are used together to handle the +entire C/C++ project development lifecycle: creation, development, testing, +and delivery. For additional information, including documentation for +individual toolchain components, man pages, etc., refer to the \c{build2} +project \l{https://build2.org/doc.xhtml Documentation} page. + + \h1#guide|Getting Started Guide| The aim of this guide is to get you started developing C/C++ projects with the @@ -1283,6 +1291,10 @@ be of this kind. However, sometimes we may only wish to use a dependency during the build, typically a tool, such as a source code generator. This kind of dependency is called a \i{build-time dependency}. +\N|Build-time dependencies are an advanced topic and if you don't have an +immediate need for this functionality, you may skip this section without any +loss of continuity.| + Why do we need to distinguish between the two kinds of dependencies? The primary reason is cross-compilation: if we build a tool in the same (cross-compiling) build configuration as our project, then we will not be able @@ -1346,7 +1358,7 @@ depends: * xxd >= 8.2.0 \ The \c{*} mark in front of the \c{xxd} name indicates that it's a build-time -dependency (think of \c{*} as the executable mark printed by \c{ls}). +dependency. Next we import \c{xxd} in our \c{buildfile}: |