README.Cygwin:
Rename -> README.Cygwin.md.
Replace the contents of this file; its existing contents were
horribly out-of-date.
README.MS-VisualC.md:
README.MS-Windows.md:
Update links.
NEWS.md:
Announce that 32-bit Cygwin is no longer supported.
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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:
-
Cygwin. See README.Cygwin.md.
-
MSYS. See README.MinGW.
-
MSYS2. See 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 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.
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 for
how to deal with this.