Difference between revisions of "Target Darwin"

From Lazarus wiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
m (→‎Usage: Fix typo)
(→‎More: Updated)
Line 33: Line 33:
 
== More ==
 
== More ==
  
* Mac OS Pascal universal interfaces are part of the fpc packages: check packages/univint
+
See the Wiki's [[Portal:Mac|Mac Portal]].
  
* IDE already works, except for some graphic glitches on the user output screen,
+
[[Category:iOS]]
 
 
* Can mouse events be supported with Terminal.app and X11.app? how?
 
** It is not possible to support the mouse in Terminal.app. In xterm (X11) it should be possible.
 
 
 
[[Category: iOS]]
 
 
[[Category:macOS]]
 
[[Category:macOS]]

Revision as of 06:39, 14 April 2021

macOSlogo.png

This article applies to macOS only.

See also: Multiplatform Programming Guide

Apple iOS new.svg

This article applies to iOS only.

See also: Multiplatform Programming Guide

English (en)

Warning-icon.png

Warning: Much of this page appears out of date

Introduction

Darwin is the target for macOS and iOS, both PowerPC, ARM, i386 and X86_64. Programs may also be run on a machine with only Darwin installed.

Installation

See Installing Lazarus on macOS.

Usage

1) Lazarus IDE

Lazarus is a Delphi-style RAD environment

2) Lightweight IDE

A free IDE in the classic Mac style

3) Any Editor (AlphaX, BBedit, ...) and command line (fpc your_pascal_program.pas)

Universal binaries

Normally for each processor - operating system combination there is one executable, but in Mac OS X you can combine a PowerPC and a x86 binary into a so called "Universal Binary". To do this the PowerPC and i386 executables have to be compiled separately and then combined using the lipo command line tool.

The Free Pascal installer for x86 already installs a PowerPC cross-compiler so you only need to use ppcppc instead of fpc to build your project to have the PowerPC binary. If have a PowerPC computer, then the simplest solution is to build the x86 binary in a different computer with x86 architecture, or use an emulator to run Mac OS X running in x86 architecture.

More

See the Wiki's Mac Portal.