|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
Turbo Delphi 2006 / Delphi 2009 question
Hi,
I'm trying to build a Turbo Delphi/BDS2006 and D2009 project in VSB 7.x. This works perfectly, however, every time I perform a build in VSB, the Borland IDE gets started, compiles and exits afterwards. Is this by intention? I expected that the IDE does not start up but using the command line compiler instead. I've just set up a Filename in Project/Group: Q:\_DelphiGlobals\MyCmdLinkButton\package\MyCmdLin kButtonD10R.bdsproj nothing more at the moment. OTH, I've installed Delphi 2009, too, and would like to compile this project in this IDE, in a further step. I'm using this Filename Q:\_DelphiGlobals\MyCmdLinkButton\package\MyCmdLin kButtonD12R.dproj in Project/Group and the IDE does not start up but compiles in the background, which is perfectly. What did I made wrong in case of Turbo Delphi? Edit: When compiling the project in Delphi 7 (Filename: \MyCmdLinkButton\package\MyCmdLinkButtonD7R.dpk) the IDE, too, isn't starting. Last edited by Roaster; 11-08-2009 at 02:52 PM. |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
In v2006, the .bdsproj file can only be built by the Delphi IDE, which displays a GUI when run. The older .dpr/.dpk file formats can be built with dcc32, which is a console app.
http://www.kinook.com/VisBuildPro/Ma...ctgrouptab.htm http://www.kinook.com/VisBuildPro/Ma...optionstab.htm |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
thanks for your reply.
I didn't know this! How does VBP distinguish which IDE to call (Delphi 7 / BDS 2006) when using a filename with extension .dpr/.dpk? ( I guess I've to use the 'Override default compiler location:' option, correct? ) As already mentioned, I would like to use VBP to compile a project in Delphi 7 and BDS2006, using the command line compiler. |
|
|