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Home/ Questions/Q 1100665
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 17, 20262026-05-17T00:54:59+00:00 2026-05-17T00:54:59+00:00

I am developing a program on OSX 10.6.4 (Snow Leopard), and I want to

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I am developing a program on OSX 10.6.4 (Snow Leopard), and I want to be able to run the compiled product on other Intel Macs, some of whom may not have XCode isntalled.

To simplify things, I first wrote a Hello World program.

#include<stdio.h>
int main() {
    printf("Hello world!\n");
    return 0;
}

If I compile it as

gcc -static prog.c

I get the folllowing error:

ld: library not found for -lcrt0.o

I don’t know where to find this library. Now, some people have mentioned that I should not compile statically on macs since the system shared libraries should be available everywhere (third party libraries can be manually linked). However, when I try to run this Hello World program on another mac, I get the folowing error:

 dyld: unknown required load command 0x80000022
 Trace/BPT trap

So, how do you compile a program on mac so that it can be distributed? I am not having architecture issues, as most computers I am interested in are Intel Macs.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-17T00:54:59+00:00Added an answer on May 17, 2026 at 12:54 am

    Don’t use -static. Your executable will run fine on other 10.6.x x86 Macs. If you want to deploy on pre-10.6 Macs then you’ll need to use the appropriate SDK but apart from that it should “just work”, regardless of whether the developer tools are installed.

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