Does anyone know a good c++ compiler equivalent for MinGW on Mac OSX (10.4x)? I just started a class that requires the use of MinGW, but since it's native windows I obviously can't use it. And just to clear the air, I would rather not install Boot Camp just to use a c++ compiler.
Thanks for the help!
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GDB Installation on Mac OS X. If you work on a Mac OS X 10.9 Mavericks or later, you will run into the problem of Eclipse refusing to interactively debug problems that otherwise build and run fine: An attempt to start a debugging session by selecting Run. Aug 29, 2012 Often times, you need c or gcc compiler to compile open source projects in Mac OS X. The problem is Mac OS X doesn’t install the gcc compiler by default. If you try to install or compile some projects that required c/gcc compiler, following errors message will be logged. MingW Installer Mac OS. GitHub Gist: instantly share code, notes, and snippets.
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MinGW is a POSIX compatibility layer for Windows. Mac OSX is a POSIX system, so you can just use g++. If it doesn't already come with the system, you can download and install it without any trouble from '>
Jump to PostAlright, a little bit of information here. Mac OS X is indeed a POSIX operating system, built on top of FreeBSD, which is a Unix clone. It can run all tools that Unix/Linux can run, although since it's Unix clone, it's a bit modified and often Linux programs need to …
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MinGW is a POSIX compatibility layer for Windows. Mac OSX is a POSIX system, so you can just use g++. If it doesn't already come with the system, you can download and install it without any trouble from '>here. The only problem is that there might be subtle differences in how MinGW and a true POSIX system behave.