I had a very long path, and there's a file in there somewhere (not gcc.exe) but another file, that gcc.exe is accessing from the path..
So when I cleared the path, it worked
C:\MinGW>cd bin
C:\MinGW\bin>where gcc.exe
C:\MinGW\bin\gcc.exe
C:\Perl64\site\bin\gcc.exe
^^ So running gcc from there will definitely run the ming gcc.exe
C:\MinGW\bin>type file6.c
#include<stdio.h>
void main()
{
int num1,num2;
scanf("%2d %4d",&num1,&num2);
printf("a=%d b=%d",num1,num2);
scanf("%d",&num1);
//flushall();
printf("c=%d",num1);
}
Compiling it I got this error
C:\MinGW\bin>gcc file6.c
gcc: error: CreateProcess: No such file or directory
My PATH was huge
C:\MinGW\bin>path
PATH=C:\Windows\system32;C:\Windows;C:\Windows\system32\wbem;C:\P......
C:\MinGW\bin>path | grep -io "ming"
It didn't have ming there.
C:\MinGW\bin>echo MING | grep -io "ming"
MING
(and yeah that grep works..the path didn't have ming there)
Clearing my path completely, led it to work!
C:\MinGW\bin>set PATH=
C:\MinGW\bin>gcc file6.c
C:\MinGW\bin>
So, it's not clear yet precisely what it was in the PATH that led to the clash. What directory, what file.
Update-
The above seems to be correct to me but to add, it's also not a simple case of something earlier in the path clashing.. because normally the current directory takes precedence. And it does here in so far as gcc --version shows it's running the ming one and not one of the ones in a conflicting directory. So there's something funny going on that, if the conflicting directory is in the path) , one has to either do .\gcc or add .
to the start of the path or add c:\MinGW\bin
before any conflicting directories in the path. this is the case even when you're in C:\MinGW\bin
and that's strange. And when it gives an error, it is still running Ming's gcc but (For some reason) looking at the conflicting directory too, as I see from process monitor. There may be more of an answer here http://wiki.codeblocks.org/index.php?title=Installing_MinGW_with_Vista in the link mentioned in the very upvoted answer here
That's Ming32 bit..
Looking at Ming 64bit, probably has te same issue, but I see, interestingly, it comes with a bat file that (sensibly) actually puts the bin directory at the tart of the path. And it looks like that is a standard way of running Ming gcc properly.
The code::blocks IDE (sensibly) also puts the bin directory at the start of the path. If you run a C program that shows environment variables then you see that.