make is a powerful utility which allows programs to be broken down into
        small pieces, and based on the date of modification, the pieces not up-to-date are
        recompiled and/or linked. A basic 
makefile is shown
        below.
<program> : <objectfiles> <libraries>
  cc -o <program> <objectfiles> <libraries> -lm
.c.o :
  cc -c $*.c
 
      In this example, the program being compiled is called 
mytrans. The
        object file needed is 
mytrans.o and the two libraries are
          
hminlib.a and 
hmlib.a. The object files are
        created by compiling the source code files, 
mytrans.c, which are not
        explicitly listed in the 
makefile. After the substitutions are made, the
          
makefile needed to create the program 
mytrans looks
        like this:
        
mytrans : mytrans.o hminlib.a hmlib.a
  cc -o mytrans mytrans.o hminlib.a hmlib.a -lm
.c.o :
  cc -c $*.c