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The set of compile flags used for a target's C and C++ sources is based
on the linker language. By default this is always the C++ flags if any
C++ sources appear in the target, and otherwise the C flags. Therefore
we can define the `COMPILE_LANGUAGE` generator expression in
`INCLUDE_DIRECTORIES` to match the selected language.
This is not exactly the same as for other generators, but is the best VS
and Xcode can do. It is also sufficient for many use cases since the
set of include directories for C and C++ is frequently similar but may
be distinct from those for other languages like CUDA.
Fixes: #17435
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The set of compile flags used for a target's C and C++ sources is based
on the linker language. By default this is always the C++ flags if any
C++ sources appear in the target, and otherwise the C flags. Therefore
we can define the `COMPILE_LANGUAGE` generator expression in
`COMPILE_DEFINITIONS` to match the selected language.
This is not exactly the same as for other generators, but is the best VS
and Xcode can do. It is also sufficient for many use cases since the
set of definitions for C and C++ is frequently similar but may be
distinct from those for other languages like CUDA.
Issue: #17435
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When rejecting the `COMPILE_LANGUAGE` generator expression on include
directories and compile definitions with Xcode, add `file(GENERATE)` to
the allowed set in the message. It is allowed and already covered
by the `RunCMake.File_Generate` test `COMPILE_LANGUAGE-genex` case.
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Issue an error if this is encountered by an IDE generator.
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