I read this: pp only to create executable when source has changed
Update: Perhaps this helps:
Makefile
hello: hello.pl Foo.pm pp hello.pl -o hello.exe
Foo.pm
package Foo; # test1 1;
hello.pl
#!/c:/perl/bin/perl use lib q(.); use Foo; print "Hello!\n";
First call of dmake builds hello.exe. Next call shows `hello' is up to date. Change Foo.pm and run dmake.
SearchUpdate: Another weird use of make ;-) 28.13 make Isn't Just for Programmers! in "Unix Power Tools"
OK, i've bought the book and i hope Tim doesn't blame...
manual: ch01.fmt ch02.fmt ch03.fmt lp ch0[1-3].fmt ch01.fmt: ch01 nroff -mm ch01 > ch01.fmt ch02.fmt: ch02 tbl ch02 | nroff -mm > ch02.fmt ch03.fmt: ch03a ch03b ch03c nroff -mm ch03[abc] > ch03.fmt
Best Regards, Karl
«The Crux of the Biscuit is the Apostrophe»
In reply to Re: how to create a makefile using PAR::Packer
by karlgoethebier
in thread how to create a makefile using PAR::Packer
by gepebril69
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