X-Git-Url: http://plrg.eecs.uci.edu/git/?p=junction.git;a=blobdiff_plain;f=README.md;fp=README.md;h=f12cd11da1696a8e6911176b7e77a426c9f1d314;hp=266abe0f58a71ab253094e0222ed38d45020fcf4;hb=b0a1a6af57d80d858541a5b1974bf45bcbcdd0f5;hpb=1926465cd198a8b9f34799df59d6da517c243511 diff --git a/README.md b/README.md index 266abe0..f12cd11 100644 --- a/README.md +++ b/README.md @@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ This will create the following file structure: ## Configuration -When you first run CMake on Junction, Turf will detect the capabilities of your compiler and write the results to a file in the build tree named `include/turf_config.h`. Similarly, Junction will write `include/junction_config.h` to the build tree. You can modify the contents of those files by setting variables when CMake runs. This can be done by passing additional options to `cmake`, or by using an interactive GUI such as `cmake-gui` or `ccmake`. +When you first run CMake on Junction, Turf will detect the capabilities of your compiler and write the results to a file in the build tree named `turf/include/turf_config.h`. Similarly, Junction will write `include/junction_config.h` to the build tree. You can modify the contents of those files by setting variables when CMake runs. This can be done by passing additional options to `cmake`, or by using an interactive GUI such as `cmake-gui` or `ccmake`. For example, to configure Turf to use the C++11 standard library, you can set the `TURF_PREFER_CPP11` variable on the command line: