Compiling on OS X Big Sur
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Contrary to popular belief, we are not all-knowing-all-seeing magical beings!
If you want help you're going to have to provide lots of info. Like what is your hardware, what is your operating system, what version of GZDoom/LZDoom/whatever you're using, what mods you're loading, how you're loading it, what you've already tried for fixing the problem, and anything else that is even remotely relevant to the problem.
We can't magically figure out what it is if you're going to be vague, and if we feel like you're just wasting our time with guessing games we will act like that's what you're really doing and won't help you.
Contrary to popular belief, we are not all-knowing-all-seeing magical beings!
If you want help you're going to have to provide lots of info. Like what is your hardware, what is your operating system, what version of GZDoom/LZDoom/whatever you're using, what mods you're loading, how you're loading it, what you've already tried for fixing the problem, and anything else that is even remotely relevant to the problem.
We can't magically figure out what it is if you're going to be vague, and if we feel like you're just wasting our time with guessing games we will act like that's what you're really doing and won't help you.
Re: Compiling on OS X Big Sur
Subtrees seemed to have some promise. Again, it's going to be weighing pros and cons of it to see if it's worth it. And it might well be that the only way to know is to try it out empirically.
- Graf Zahl
- Lead GZDoom+Raze Developer
- Posts: 49230
- Joined: Sat Jul 19, 2003 10:19 am
- Location: Germany
Re: Compiling on OS X Big Sur
I've been using subtrees at work. They definitely work better than submodules, but since the repo does not remember the relation you basically need a batch file in the root directory for easy maintenance. For ZMusic they should be fine, but for some repos that contain submodules they are pointless as the sub-repo's submodules would get dragged right back in.