diff --git a/api/sixtyfps-cpp/README.md b/api/sixtyfps-cpp/README.md index 464bf9065..0254c08a4 100644 --- a/api/sixtyfps-cpp/README.md +++ b/api/sixtyfps-cpp/README.md @@ -25,7 +25,7 @@ First you need to install the prerequisites: * Install Rust by following the [Rust Getting Started Guide](https://www.rust-lang.org/learn/get-started). Once this is done, you should have the ```rustc``` compiler and the ```cargo``` build system installed in your path. -* **cmake** (3.19 or newer) +* **[cmake](https://cmake.org/download/)** (3.19 or newer) * A C++ compiler that supports C++17 (e.g., **MSVC 2019** on Windows) You can include SixtyFPS in your CMake project using CMake's `FetchContent` feature. Insert the following snippet into your diff --git a/api/sixtyfps-cpp/docs/cmake.md b/api/sixtyfps-cpp/docs/cmake.md index 2413a031d..a529eaafc 100644 --- a/api/sixtyfps-cpp/docs/cmake.md +++ b/api/sixtyfps-cpp/docs/cmake.md @@ -32,7 +32,7 @@ First you need to install the prerequisites: * Install Rust by following the [Rust Getting Started Guide](https://www.rust-lang.org/learn/get-started). If you already have Rust installed, make sure that it's at least version 1.54 or newer. You can check which version you have installed by running `rustc --version`. Once this is done, you should have the ```rustc``` compiler and the ```cargo``` build system installed in your path. -* **cmake** (3.19 or newer) +* **[cmake](https://cmake.org/download/)** (3.19 or newer) * A C++ compiler that supports C++17 (e.g., **MSVC 2019** on Windows) You can include SixtyFPS in your CMake project using CMake's [`FetchContent`](https://cmake.org/cmake/help/latest/module/FetchContent.html) feature. diff --git a/docs/building.md b/docs/building.md index e12053745..5a37371f3 100644 --- a/docs/building.md +++ b/docs/building.md @@ -36,7 +36,7 @@ You can still not build it by doing `cargo build --workspace --exclude sixtyfps- ### For the C++ dev (optional) -* **cmake** (3.19 or newer) +* **[cmake](https://cmake.org/download/)** (3.19 or newer) * A C++ compiler that can do C++17 (e.g., **MSVC 2019** on Windows) ## Testing