[Libreoffice-commits] core.git: README.cross
Chris Sherlock
chris.sherlock79 at gmail.com
Wed May 15 08:04:47 PDT 2013
README.cross | 8 ++++----
1 file changed, 4 insertions(+), 4 deletions(-)
New commits:
commit 91b27bc3d86925e1bb52bd3ab8e2f6f87ededd3f
Author: Chris Sherlock <chris.sherlock79 at gmail.com>
Date: Thu May 16 00:49:50 2013 +1000
Documentation update of README.cross
* Fixed typos
* Errant/missing commas fixed
* autogen.lastrun -> autogen.input
Change-Id: Ibc0d34f21de661139e622a34d760a6683f394643
Reviewed-on: https://gerrit.libreoffice.org/3916
Reviewed-by: Tor Lillqvist <tml at iki.fi>
Tested-by: Tor Lillqvist <tml at iki.fi>
diff --git a/README.cross b/README.cross
index 3d962eb..28e4a333 100644
--- a/README.cross
+++ b/README.cross
@@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ below.
Note that in the case of LibreOffice, it is uncommon to run the
configure script directly. Normally one uses the autogen.sh script.
The autogen.sh script reads command-line options from file called
-autogen.lastrun if it exists. The typical way of working is to keep
+autogen.input if it exists. The typical way of working is to keep
the configure parameters in that file and edit it as needed.
@@ -58,19 +58,19 @@ This OOo-originated MinGW support attempts to be for both running the
Cygwin gcc in its -mno-cygwin mode, and a Windows-native MinGW
compiler. The -mno-cygwin mechanism in the Cygwin gcc is rapidly being
obsoleted, if it isn't already, and we have not attempted to try to
-keep it working; in fact we have activly cleaned out mechanisms
+keep it working; in fact we have actively cleaned out mechanisms
related to this. Ditto for native MinGW. If one compiles natively on
Windows, just use a version of Microsoft's compiler. OpenOffice.org
and LibreOffice have been built for Windows all the time using that.
-The only case where it makes sense to use MinGW, is for
+The only case where it makes sense to use MinGW is for
cross-compilation. There is just too much crack involved on Windows
anyway, and it is a semi-miracle that the MSVC build under Cygwin
works as nicely as it does.
MinGW is available as cross-build toolchains pre-packaged in more or
less official packages for many Linux distros including Debian, Fedora
-and openSUSE. For instance the mingw32 packages in the Open Build
+and openSUSE. For instance, the mingw32 packages in the Open Build
Service, running on openSUSE, can be found at:
http://download.opensuse.org/repositories/windows:/mingw:/win32/
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