This question has been for quite a long time for me. I don't use c++ very often, and it seems most cpp libraries are provided as a zip file or tar ball containing source code.
So, the question is:
Why those projects don't provide a pre-compiled binary file?
My current understanding of the "autoconf
, make
, make install
, ..." procedure is to make sure everything is correct and then compile source codes to a executable file or some libraries. But if we are eventually getting the same thing, why should we compile it every time? I didn't mean to maintain a separate project for compiled libs, but during debug and test process, those files should be generated automatically, why don't just put them into the release file?
For example: the FTGL library's source comes with visual studio solution files (.sln), if they uses this to develop and debug, why don't they put the compiled binary into their release file?