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Home/ Questions/Q 772437
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 14, 20262026-05-14T18:48:11+00:00 2026-05-14T18:48:11+00:00

package_version := $(version)x0d$(date) what is the x0d part between version and date vars? is

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  • package_version := $(version)x0d$(date)

    what is the x0d part between version and date vars? is it just string?

  • What $(dotin_files:.in=) does below

code

dotin_files       := $(shell find . -type f -name \*.in)
dotin_files       := $(dotin_files:.in=)
  • what this means $(dotin_files:=.in)

code

$(dotin_files): $(dotin_files:=.in)
 $(substitute) $@.in > $@
  • can target contain multiple files?

  • what is the meaning of declaring target variable as PHONY?

code

.PHONY: $(dotin_files)
  • In the regex replacement code below

code

substitute := perl -p -e 's/@([^@]+)@/defined $$ENV{$$1} ? $$ENV{$$1} : $$&/ge'

what are $$ENV{$$1} and $$&? I guess it’s Perl scope…

thanks for your time

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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-14T18:48:12+00:00Added an answer on May 14, 2026 at 6:48 pm

    Variable Expansion

    $() is variable expansion in make, this should just be string substitution – if your makefile is

    version=1
    date=1.1.10
    package_version:=$(version)x0d$(date)
    

    then the variable package_version will expand to 1x0d1.1.10.

    Substitution

    The syntax $(var:a=b) is a substitution reference and will expand to var with a suffix a substituted with b.

    For example, in

    foobar:= foo bar
    faabar:=$(foobar:oo=aa)
    

    $(faabar) will expand to the string faa bar.

    Multiple Targets

    Multiple targets in a make rule is equivalent to having n rules with a single target, eg

    foo bar:foo.c bar.c
         $(CC) -o $@ $^
    

    is equivalent to

    foo:foo.c bar.c
         $(CC) -o $@ $^
    bar:foo.c bar.c
         $(CC) -o $@ $^
    

    remember that any variables here are expanded.

    Phony Targets

    The .PHONY target declares that a rule doesn’t produce an actual file, so it will always be built. As always, variables are expanded first. In your case this will expand to something like

    .PHONY: foo bar
    

    Escaping

    A dollar sign is an escape character in makefiles, the $$ in your perl example is a literal $, eg substitute will be the string

    perl -p -e 's/@([^@]+)@/defined $ENV{$1} ? $ENV{$1} : $&/ge'
    

    The dollar signs here are processed by perl, and probably give environment variables (I don’t know perl).

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