The curl tool project files for VC8 to VC12 would set this setting to
$(IntDir) which is the Visual Studio default value. To avoid confusion
when viewing settings from within Visual Studio and for consistency
with the libcurl project files removed this setting.
Conflicts:
projects/Windows/VC10/src/curlsrc.tmpl
projects/Windows/VC11/src/curlsrc.tmpl
projects/Windows/VC12/src/curlsrc.tmpl
projects/Windows/VC8/src/curlsrc.tmpl
projects/Windows/VC9/src/curlsrc.tmpl
The curl tool project files for VC7 to VC12 would set this settings to
$(IntDir)$(TargetName).pch which is the Visual Studio default value. To
avoid confusion when viewing settings from within Visual Studio and for
consistency with the libcurl project files removed this setting.
Conflicts:
projects/Windows/VC10/src/curlsrc.tmpl
projects/Windows/VC11/src/curlsrc.tmpl
projects/Windows/VC12/src/curlsrc.tmpl
projects/Windows/VC8/src/curlsrc.tmpl
projects/Windows/VC9/src/curlsrc.tmpl
The curl tool project files for VC7 to VC12 would set these settings to
$(IntDir) which is the Visual Studio default value. To avoid confusion
when viewing settings from within Visual Studio and for consistency
with the libcurl project files removed these two settings.
The curl tool project files for VC7 to VC12 would override the default
setting with the output filename being the same as the linker PDB file.
As such the compiler file would be overwritten with the linker file
for all debug builds.
To avoid this overwrite and for consistency with the libcurl project
files, removed the setting to force the default filename to be used.
As with commit 11397eb6dd, use $(TargetDir) and $(TargetName) for the
Import Library output rather than $(OutDir)\$(ProjectName)d.lib and
$(OutDir)\$(ProjectName).lib.
Added a more thorough version of the VC8 project files that exist in
the "vs" folder with the intention to add support for other versions of
Visual Studio. These files support side-by-side compilation, 32-bit and
64-bit builds as well as support for some of the third-party libraries
curl uses.