ADC Home > Reference Library > Reference > Mac OS X > Mac OS X Man Pages

 

This document is a Mac OS X manual page. Manual pages are a command-line technology for providing documentation. You can view these manual pages locally using the man(1) command. These manual pages come from many different sources, and thus, have a variety of writing styles.

This manual page is associated with the Mac OS X developer tools. The software or headers described may not be present on your Mac OS X installation until you install the developer tools package. This package is available on your Mac OS X installation DVD, and the latest versions can be downloaded from developer.apple.com.

For more information about the manual page format, see the manual page for manpages(5).



C99(1)                    BSD General Commands Manual                   C99(1)

NAME
     c99 -- standard C language compiler

SYNOPSIS
     c99 [-cEgs] [-D name[=value]] ... [-I directory ...] [-L directory ...] [-o outfile] [-O optlevel]
         [-U name ...] operand ...

DESCRIPTION
     This is the name of the C language compiler as required by the IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1'') stan-dard. standard.
     dard.

     The c99 compiler accepts the following options:

     -c      Suppress the link-edit phase of the compilation, and do not remove any object files that are
             produced.

     -D name[=value]
             Define name as if by a C-language #define directive.  If no ``=value'' is given, a value of 1
             will be used.  Note that in order to request a translation as specified by IEEE Std 1003.1-2001
             (``POSIX.1''), you need to define _POSIX_C_SOURCE=200112L either in the source or using this
             option.  The -D option has lower precedence than the -U option.  That is, if name is used in
             both a -U and a -D option, name will be undefined regardless of the order of the options.  The
             -D option may be specified more than once.

     -E      Copy C-language source files to the standard output, expanding all preprocessor directives; no
             compilation will be performed.

     -g      Produce symbolic information in the object or executable files.

     -I directory
             Change the algorithm for searching for headers whose names are not absolute pathnames to look
             in the directory named by the directory pathname before looking in the usual places.  Thus,
             headers whose names are enclosed in double-quotes ("") will be searched for first in the direc-tory directory
             tory of the file with the #include line, then in directories named in -I options, and last in
             the usual places.  For headers whose names are enclosed in angle brackets (<>), the header will
             be searched for only in directories named in -I options and then in the usual places.  Directo-ries Directories
             ries named in -I options shall be searched in the order specified.  The -I option may be speci-fied specified
             fied more than once.

     -L directory
             Change the algorithm of searching for the libraries named in the -l objects to look in the
             directory named by the directory pathname before looking in the usual places.  Directories
             named in -L options will be searched in the order specified.  The -L option may be specified
             more than once.

     -o outfile
             Use the pathname outfile, instead of the default a.out, for the executable file produced.

     -O optlevel
             If optlevel is zero, disable all optimizations.  Otherwise, enable optimizations at the speci-fied specified
             fied level.

     -s      Produce object and/or executable files from which symbolic and other information not required
             for proper execution has been removed (stripped).

     -U name
             Remove any initial definition of name.  The -U option may be specified more than once.

     -W 64   Make pointers 64 bits.  There is presently no -W 32 option, since it is the default.

     An operand is either in the form of a pathname or the form -l library.  At least one operand of the
     pathname form needs to be specified.  Supported operands are of the form:

           file.c      A C-language source file to be compiled and optionally linked.  The operand must be
                       of this form if the -c option is used.

           file.a      A library of object files, as produced by ar(1), passed directly to the link editor.

           file.o      An object file produced by c99 -c, and passed directly to the link editor.

           -l library  Search the library named liblibrary.a.  A library will be searched when its name is
                       encountered, so the placement of a -l operand is significant.

SEE ALSO
     ar(1), c89(1), cc(1)

STANDARDS
     The c99 utility interface conforms to IEEE Std 1003.1-2001 (``POSIX.1'').

BSD                             October 7, 2002                            BSD

Did this document help you?
Yes: Tell us what works for you.
It’s good, but: Report typos, inaccuracies, and so forth.
It wasn’t helpful: Tell us what would have helped.