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Modern CMake for C++

You're reading from   Modern CMake for C++ Discover a better approach to building, testing, and packaging your software

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Product type Paperback
Published in Feb 2022
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781801070058
Length 460 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Rafał Świdziński Rafał Świdziński
Author Profile Icon Rafał Świdziński
Rafał Świdziński
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Introducing CMake
2. Chapter 1: First Steps with CMake FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: The CMake Language 4. Chapter 3: Setting Up Your First CMake Project 5. Section 2: Building With CMake
6. Chapter 4: Working with Targets 7. Chapter 5: Compiling C++ Sources with CMake 8. Chapter 6: Linking with CMake 9. Chapter 7: Managing Dependencies with CMake 10. Section 3: Automating With CMake
11. Chapter 8: Testing Frameworks 12. Chapter 9: Program Analysis Tools 13. Chapter 10: Generating Documentation 14. Chapter 11: Installing and Packaging 15. Chapter 12: Creating Your Professional Project 16. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix: Miscellaneous Commands

The concept of a target

If you have ever used GNU Make, you will have already seen the concept of a target. Essentially, it's a recipe that a buildsystem uses to compile a list of files into another file. It can be a .cpp implementation file compiled into an .o object file, a group of .o files packaged into an .a static library, and many other combinations.

CMake, however, allows you to save time and skip the intermediate steps of those recipes; it works on a higher level of abstraction. It understands how to build an executable directly from source files. So, you don't need to write an explicit recipe to compile any object files. All that's required is an add_executable() command with the name of the executable target and a list of the files that are to be its elements:

add_executable(app1 a.cpp b.cpp c.cpp)

We already used this command in previous chapters and we already know how executable targets are used in practice – during the generation step...

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