Mercury on Windows ================== This file documents the port of Mercury to Microsoft Windows. Contents -------- * Supported versions of Windows * Building Mercury on Windows * Building Mercury for Windows on Linux * Using Mercury on Windows Supported versions of Windows ----------------------------- Mercury has been tested with the following versions of Windows: * Windows 7 * Windows 10 * Windows 11 We no longer actively maintain support for older versions of Windows. Building Mercury on Windows --------------------------- The Mercury build process requires the use of a number of Unix tools such as `sh` and `make`. This means that a Unix emulation environment is required to build Mercury on Windows. Three such environments are supported: 1. [Cygwin](https://www.cygwin.com). See [README.Cygwin](README.Cygwin). 2. [MSYS](https://osdn.net/projects/mingw/). See [README.MinGW](README.MinGW). 3. [MSYS2](https://www.msys2.org). See [README.MinGW](README.MinGW). Mercury can also be built using the MS Visual C compiler (MSVC), although one of the above environments is still required for the build process. See [README.MS-VisualC.md](README.MS-VisualC.md) for instructions on how to build Mercury with MSVC. NOTE: while a Unix emulation environment is required to build Mercury on Windows, one is NOT required to use Mercury on Windows. Building Mercury for Windows on Linux ------------------------------------- Alternatively, you can cross-compile Mercury on Linux with a MinGW cross-compiler. See [README.cross.md](README.cross.md). Using Mercury on Windows ------------------------ On Windows systems the usual name for the Mercury compiler, `mmc`, conflicts with the name of the executable for the Microsoft Management Console. See the "Using the Mercury compiler" chapter of the [Mercury Users's Guide](https://mercurylang.org/documentation/documentation.html) for how to deal with this. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------