Alternatively one may use the -Wl,-rpath option to hardcode into the client program (not the library!) the path to libapp.so.
This is acceptable if e.g. libapp.so is not designed to be shipped separately and to be installed, but is just going to be used with the client program.
(Good practice is to use -Wl,-rpath,$ORIGIN to avoid hardcoding an absolute path in the executable.)
As I understand it it's possible to use some options (including -Wl,-rpath I think) to give hints for the linker to look or whatever but huh that's quite complicated.
Right, but this is assuming a system library, i.e. one that is installed.
if libapp.so depends on foo (coming in libfoo.so flavour) and it's entirely in userland (i.e. no installation), all will go well until running the final executable.
Because the dynamic linker will fail to find your development library among the system's libraries.
The key thing is that you can link to whatever using -L... -l..., but you have to point the dynamic linker (unless it's found in the system) in the end.
Static libraries sidestep the dynamic linker 'issue' but are not best practices so there you go.
@TonyTheTiger Really, SO has spoiled us terribly. Now we already need to fix two-word sentences. I'm no better than you are. Every time I post something at Twitter I'm terrified by the thought that I will never be able to fix anything I post there. Blowing my stupidity right out at the world...
Anyway, IME those preview buttons help little. You can look at such a preview however long you want, the moment your print your 20page doc, you see a glaring error you overlooked at the preview.
In one of the projects I'm working on, I'm seeing this code
struct Base {
virtual ~Base() { }
};
struct ClassX {
bool isHoldingDerivedObj() const {
return typeid(1 ? *m_basePtr : *m_basePtr) == typeid(Derived);
}
Base *m_basePtr;
};
I have never seen typeid used like that. Why doe...
@Johannes: I'm not going to even attempt to solve that. You're well known for your code pranks, and I don't feel like walking into one of your traps today.
@MartinhoFernandes it's not fun for others anymore then
you just said most of my answers are pranks. so my rep can't be well earned at all :(
@MartinhoFernandes i will leave it open until someone enlights us
@sbi i also don't know how you can fall into a "trap"
@sbi the fact that your message was starred by some doesn't necessarily mean those agree with the message's content. it may just mean that the message is funny
(in fact, I'm one of the starrers, because I think it's funny)
at least 15 other people voting my question up don't agree with you either
@JohannesSchaublitb Well, if many of your appearances here are pranks, and your reputation is that of a prankster, then that reputation is well earned, no?
Anyway, looking over that conversation I see that most of my messages are badly missing a smiley. I think you have taken this way too serious. I apologize.
@JohannesSchaublitb Those where 14-17 year old kids (I have one in that age), many of which jumped into the water and tried to swim 600m to the shore. They were picked up by owners of small boats coming from the shore, who took their boats to the fjord trying to pick up those kids while the guy on the island shot at them. One woman said it was terrible that she had to leave kids in the water when her boat was full after she had picked up ten of them.
> Your use case is one of the better examples of wanting to use a singleton. You say in one of the comments "To me logging has always seemed a natural candidate for Singletons." You're absolutely right.
Edit (to clarify my use case)
I have multiple classes which would become singletons, and would prefer not to have to resort to globals - IMHO they're a major code smell, and if you are forced to use them it represents a deficiency in the language, but that's obviously opinion rather than objecti...
that's like saying "why even both to say you can speak your mother tongue? The word <some strange word you never used nor heard but that exists> has been part of the language since you've been born"
@JohannesSchaublitb IF you tag a question c++-faq, the @Feed guy will post it here and I get a mail about that tag once a week, so it's really hard to sneak one past me.
Hey guys, I'm trying to debug a function in R that calls a C++ function but something isn't working. Can someone explain to me what these lines of code do?
@OctavianDamiean Good! If we get this going in other tags than c++, we might have some more leverage to wrestle additional support for this from the SE team.
@TonyTheTiger I'd say you know where I live, but then I have only one artichoke for each of us. When @Dead appears here (ten minutes left), I'd already need to relinquish mine, and I don't think one of the kids would do that for someone else. :)
@OctavianDamiean I knew that much. However, I read @Raynos' statement as if there already was another -faq tag besides the c++-faq one. And that's what I'm asking about.
@Raynos I usually try to find the one I consider the best.
@OctavianDamiean If you knew my real name, you'll find it smeared out all over the Internet, especially Usenet. You can find what I'm thinking about C++, programming in general, Microsoft, politics, child raising, cycling, certain books... You name it, in more than a decade I have posted about it. One day I discovered that, when I type my name into google, it would suggest the rest when I was halfway through my last name. That was when I drew a line.
@sbi Meh, I don't really care about that kind of stuff to be honest. I know very well that I'll step certain people on their toes with my opinions and what I write on the internet but that is just how life works I think. They'll have to live with it.
even managed or interpreted languages can compile their own compilers, although of course in order to write the VMs they run on you still need something else
@OctavianDamiean You know, when I was younger, I also participated in a few rows and flame wars. Nothing I'm proud of, but it's all out there, and will be for all eternity. I once asked a boss of mine whether he googles for names if he gets an application. His answer was something like "would you apply without googling for the company first?"