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Someone recently mentioned the target .c.o in Makefiles for cross compatability, but I fail to understand its purpose. Can anyone clarify?

2 Answers 2

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It's an old-fashioned suffix rule. The more up-to-date way to do it is to use a pattern rule:

%.o : %.c
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It's a canned rule for translating .c files, i.e. C modules, to .o object files. It exists so you don't have to write this rule yourself and is parameterized by Make variables such as CC (the C compiler to use), CFLAGS (compiler flags), etc.

So, if you use this implicit rule to compile C modules and don't tinker with any Make variables, then the person building your code can specify a compiler and flags on the command line without editing the Makefile.

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  • 2
    but you can do that with the pattern rule as well: make "CC = gcc" for example
    – chacham15
    Feb 10, 2012 at 19:20
  • 1
    @chacham15: that's right. .c.o is the older way of doing this.
    – Fred Foo
    Feb 10, 2012 at 19:21

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