Issue
This page contains a good summary of variables CMake already defines for us. I feel that some variables are the same. Take the example of CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR
and PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR
for example. They are the same, referring to the folder where the top level CMakeLists.txt is defined. So my question is: are there subtle difference between them? Thanks.
Solution
There is a difference between these variables. CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR
does indeed refer to the folder where the top-level CMakeLists.txt is defined. However, PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR
refers to the folder of the CMakeLists.txt containing the most recent project()
command.
For example, say you have a top-level project called Outer
and this contains a subdirectory with its own project called Inner
. Outer
's CMakeLists.txt has:
project(Outer)
add_subdirectory(Inner)
and Inner
's:
project(Inner)
Then in both of these CMakeLists files, CMAKE_SOURCE_DIR
will refer to Outer
's source dir. But while PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR
for Outer
is also this same dir, this is not the case for Inner
. Inner
's PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR
is the subdirectory containing its CMakeLists.txt.
This difference applies to all PROJECT_<var>
vs CMAKE_<var>
variables.
Answered By - Fraser Answer Checked By - Gilberto Lyons (WPSolving Admin)