Sujet : Re: Baby X is bor nagain
De : 643-408-1753 (at) *nospam* kylheku.com (Kaz Kylheku)
Groupes : comp.lang.cDate : 03. Jul 2024, 03:18:23
Autres entêtes
Organisation : A noiseless patient Spider
Message-ID : <20240702181356.927@kylheku.com>
References : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24
User-Agent : slrn/pre1.0.4-9 (Linux)
On 2024-07-03, Kaz Kylheku <
643-408-1753@kylheku.com> wrote:
On 2024-07-03, bart <bc@freeuk.com> wrote:
I really, really don't remember. I've tinkered with Linux every so often
for 20, maybe 25 years. You used to be able to order a job-lot of CDs
with different versions. Few did much.
>
Every major distro I've ever used going back ti 1995 made it optional
to install just about everything, including the compiler suite.
>
A very popular desktop distro is Ubuntu. GCC is not a base package in
Ubuntu.
See this question on the askubuntu stackexchange site:
https://askubuntu.com/questions/1276468/does-ubuntu-20-04-1-lts-not-come-with-a-c-compiler-by-defaultQuote:
] I recently downloaded the official desktop version of 20.04.1 and
] installed it on a machine. I was surprised to find that there was no gcc
] command available! I installed it with apt but I always thought that
] every flavour of Linux came with gcc straight out of the box.
]
] Has something recently changed in the release philosophy of Ubuntu?
Same confusion: "I always thought that every flavor of Linux came with
gcc straight out of the box."
Umm, no. gcc is needed to build many of the packages in the distro, but
is not a run-time dependency. (Or, only a small part of gcc is: some
programs dynamically depend on a "libgcc".)
A non-programming end user, who just wants e-mail, web, word processing
and games does not require gcc.
A programming user not working in C doesn't need gcc either, unless
their programming language depends on gcc.
-- TXR Programming Language: http://nongnu.org/txrCygnal: Cygwin Native Application Library: http://kylheku.com/cygnalMastodon: @Kazinator@mstdn.ca