
I'm taking a page from Dolphin's book, and including copies of each dependency's source code. This combines the ease of use of including pre-built libraries instead of needing to navigate a package manager - as is (or was) the case for MSVC - with the portability of using packages. Granted, this method's more of a jack of all trades, master of none, since it's *less* user-friendly than prebuilt packages (compilation times), and you don't get the per-distro compatibility fixes you'd get from a package manager. You can still use system libs if you want. In fact, it's still the default behaviour: compiling the libs manually is just a fallback. I'll add an option to force-enable this soon, however, since it's a nicer way to produce static MSYS2 builds than the hackish nightmare that I was using before. Not to mention, having my own copy of the sources means I can provide my own fixes and tweaks your package manager may not. For example, I can combine MSYS2's FreeType subpixel rendering with vcpkg's fix for SDL2 exporting its symbols in static builds.
10 lines
186 B
C++
10 lines
186 B
C++
|
|
#include <dirent.h>
|
|
|
|
int func (const char *d, dirent ***list, void *sort) {
|
|
int n = scandir(d, list, 0, (int(*)(const dirent **, const dirent **))sort);
|
|
}
|
|
|
|
int main() {
|
|
return 0;
|
|
}
|