freebsd-ports/lang/schemetoc/files
Chris Rees 0dd7579209 Various spelling corrections
PR:		ports/175331
Submitted by:	Christoph Mallon
Approved by:	No objections within three weeks from any maintainer

While here, style and duplicate phrase fixes in bsdcflow pkg-descr

Submitted by:	mi
2013-02-09 12:00:52 +00:00
..
main.c
Makefile
makefile-head
options-server.h
options.h
patch-aa
patch-ab
patch-ac
patch-ad
patch-ae
patch-af
patch-ag
patch-ah
patch-ai
patch-aj
patch-scrt-apply.c
patch-scrt-apply.h
patch-scrt-objects.c
patch-scrt-objects.h
patch-test-test23.sc
README.FreeBSD
x86.s

Notes for Scheme-to-C port for FreeBSD:

The documentation provided on the X library interface for Scheme-to-C
was very limited and as a result I'm not sure if I've got it right.
Instead of using having the compiler link the library archives libsc.a
(the standard schemetoc library) or scxl.a (the x library), two shared
libraries are included, libsc.so.1 and libscxl.so.1.  

The syntax of the scc compiler has been extended to automatically
use dynamic linking unless the -static flag is specified on the scc
command line.

For compiling executables on the command line from only object files
it has no method of knowing if you need the X library linked in,
and will by default not.  So, if you are building an application 
written for scheme->c which needs X support (such as ezd), you
will need to supply a -lX11 flag on the command line.  If you are
compiling a single scheme file(not an object file) which has the
(with xlib) line in the module statement it is not necessary to
include -lX11.

Those not wishing to use the X library support can delete the following
files:  

libscxl.so.1 		The shared lib.
schemetoc/libscxl.a	The library archive.
bin/scixl		The X lib interpreter.

Each is about 1.4 megabytes.