Michael Niedermayer wrote: > Hi > > On Mon, Jan 29, 2007 at 10:15:00AM +0100, Steve Lhomme wrote: >> Alex Beregszaszi wrote: >>> Hi, >>> >>>>> If you really want to be that gnucentric, >>>> do you know why everyone who uses visual <bluescreen, restarts system) C++ >>>> has a problem with understanding the different between standart and gcc? >>>> we HATE gcc and we certainly are not, where not and never will be >>>> gnucentric, ffmpeg code is stanard C, everything else is under #ifdefs >>>> like asm, always_inline and so on >>>> >>>> it must be something like >>>> * user sees vc++ fail with random program >>>> * user sees gcc to suceed with same random program >>>> * user concludes that program is written specifically for gcc as he knows >>>> MS always follows all standards very carefully >>> Thats a great point here. >> It's like the difference between people who prefer to use C99 and the >> ones who prefer to use a real-world compiler. >> >> Anyway, C99 doesn't cover inline ASM AFAIK so you can't seriously say >> that FFMPEG is not designed for gcc. > > you know very well that they are under #ifdefs (some of the other people > who claimed that ffmpeg where written for gcc may or may not have known that > but you do as you have worked with the code) so could you maybe spare The ASM code is #ifdef'd by the makefile. If you compile the code with another compiler it will fail because the ifdefs are not clean. I actually made some changes recently to DrFFMPEG to have both ppc and i386 ASM compiled in the same project at the same time (to make universal binaries in XCode) and I had to add some cleaner #ifdef's. Nevertheless, the "full" FFMPEG is only usable with a tuned gcc. That's my whole point. Portable ASM files (to be processed by nasm and yasm) is always possible and make the code much more portable. But I understand it's not the goal of this project. Steve
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