Prepare your system Apple offers you a free collection of development tools called Xcode. It although contains a IDE for Objective C and iOS development. Beside this it tools there are a lot of useful tools like different version control systems and console tools and very important the compilers. Because this is packed and very easy to install you should go to the AppStore and install Xcode if you don't have it yet. You will need to have Java installed on your Mac OS X as well but this is just a click if you try to run a Java application the first time. Download Eclipse CDT for Mac OS X Download the Eclipse CDT version of Eclipse from eclipse.org. ![]() I prefer the 64bit version. Extract the downloaded archive and move the eclipse folder to your Application directory. I renamed the folder to eclipse-cdt because I have different version of Eclipse in my Application folder. ![]() But the folder should contain the following files: Now you should be able to run the Eclipse IDE. First the Eclipse splashscreen will appear. Then you will be asked to define your workspace like the following prompt: Choose a folder or use the default value and continue with OK: You should get something like a welcome page or continue an empty overview over your new Eclipse C/C++ IDE. Create a new C++ Project as shown below: Build the new project if it's not done automatically after creation and run the binary: If everything went well you should see the Hello World message in your output console. Keyboards for mac and windows. I will recommend you to download Eclipse Juno. Eclipse juno has inbuilt facet support for jdk 1.7 compiler. This will help only in eclipse, but won't fix the problem on the Mac terminal, I guess. – Hannes M Mar 12 '13 at 6:39. Ok I am a windows user i don't know MAC. But i want to help you similar ways we do in windows.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |