Look up the instructions for your IDE and it will tell you how to add library names to the list of libraries that you want to link
also, do you want to redistribute the curl DLL with your program (dynamic linking) or do you want to include the functions of curl in your own program (static linking)?
In 2002—ten years ago!—I gave my first-ever presentation on the effective use of C++ in embedded systems. That presentation was sponsored by Programming Research, a firm that develops static analysis tools for C and C++. Such tools were near and dear to my heart then, and they're no less so now, so I was pleased when Programming Research asked me to collaborate with them again. The result is tw…
@IntermediateHacker well, same here. but this connection i'm on is via the old NMT 450 cellphone network, which after it was discontinued as cell phone network was reused as a kind of outback's internet. the connection quality depends on the weather, but on the bright side, can be used throughout Scandinavia
I'm too lazy. I'm contemplating walking to the kitchen and make some coffee. But it seems like a lot of work.
@SethCarnegie because it's a hell of a lot work to really support ANSI, including that I don't believe programs built with recent Visual C++ will run on Windows 9x (which is the target platform for ANSI version of program)
I think it's quite simple to do cross-platform Unicode. I use UTF-8 encoded std::string everywhere and do a just-in-time conversion to UTF16 when interfacing with WinAPI.
besides, it's a billion times more likely that you will need to find the length of a string or something like that than you will desperately need high performance
That said, I never tested this file on Linux. It's mostly SSE4.1 intrinsics. I'm not sure exactly which MSVC intrinsic I'm using. It's been almost 2 years since I've touched this file.
BBP.cpp:71:10: fatal error: 'omp.h' file not found
#include <omp.h>
^
1 error generated.
I'm still annoyed whenever I have to explicitly specify std::ptrdiff_t and then check that I don't get unwanted conversions. I'd rather use a range-for than deal with that.
@StackedCrooked that i can semi agree with. but then, i forget whether there are any types you can make assumptions about, other than stuff like int32_t
C:/Users/Hina/AppData/Local/Temp/BBP-735608.s: Assembler messages:
C:/Users/Hina/AppData/Local/Temp/BBP-735608.s:8: Error: bad register name `%rbp'
C:/Users/Hina/AppData/Local/Temp/BBP-735608.s:9: Error: bad register name `%rsp'
C:/Users/Hina/AppData/Local/Temp/BBP-735608.s:10: Error: bad register name `%rsp'
C:/Users/Hina/AppData/Local/Temp/BBP-735608.s:12: Error: invalid instruction suffix for `call'
C:/Users/Hina/AppData/Local/Temp/BBP-735608.s:13: Error: bad register name `%rsp'
wait... I think I need to invoke the 64-bit assembler...
@Abyx This mini-project example I have requires 64-bit compilation since it uses several 64-bit only SSE4.1 instructions. I probably shouldn't be trying to compile something this complicated right off the bat...
Problem is that I don't have any self-contained projects that are smaller than 1,500 lines.
The only other self-contained (and 32-bit compatible) project I have is a whopping 170,000 lines long...
I think that's enough for tonight. @SethCarnegie You might want to add some of this to the guide.
1. Windows headers seem to work. 2. Currently only works for 32-bit. 3. 64-bit compiles fine, but won't assemble. 4. SSE probably is fine. (I haven't tested a working SSE on 32-bit though.)
@SethCarnegie I'd say make the guide anyway. I'm sure once the word gets out, (I have an idea on how to do that.) much more capable people will come and patch it up.
@SethCarnegie It should be fine. "How to compile Clang on Windows" Add a brief description of what/why you're trying do. Cite the GoingNative presentation about Clang not having any Windows support yet.
@rubenvb also if I don't set the include path manually to mingw headers, then I get no such file as iostream or whatever that error is when it can't find a header
@rubenvb no, other stuff, can't remember exactly
@rubenvb I can try to repro if you want
@rubenvb actually it's up in the chat log some where
@SethCarnegie did you copy the binaries to the proper MinGW-w64 directory? My headre search paths fix only works for sysrooted toolchainss (everything together in one folder like mingw64
@Mysticial indeed, there are loose plans to do so, but LLVM proper needs support first
@SethCarnegie manual intervention shouldn't be necessary (if clang.exe is alongside gcc.exe in a MinGW-w64 toolchain directory). I fixed Clang for that.
@rubenvb the clang I had a problem with was the SVN version, and also it doesn't matter if the include paths shouldn't be necessary, because even when I fixed them up manually, they errored
@Mysticial I guess I'll go ahead and write the Q now?
I have been trying to find a way to get Clang working with Windows but am having trouble. I get Clang to compile successfully, but when I try to compile a program I have a bunch of errors in the standard headers.
I am aware of [rubenvb's prebuilt versions of clang](http://sourceforge.net/projects/mingw-w64/files/Toolchains%20targetting%20Win64/Personal%20Builds/rubenvb/), but I want to compile it for myself. I also was listening to the GoingNative talks about clang which said that it didn't have very good Windows support yet. How can I get clang working on Windows?
I have been trying to find a way to get Clang working on Windows but am having trouble. I get Clang to compile successfully, but when I try to compile a program I have a bunch of errors in the standard headers.
I am aware of rubenvb's prebuilt versions of clang, but I want to compile it for myse...
I would like to design and build a secure media player for linux in cpp, does you have any tips/exist modules i can use or be familiar with their API ?
@cHao That's bad thinking. 15 years ago, I also thought that, if my code would just compile with the popular Windows compilers at the time (BCB, VC), I'd be fine. Then I got a job where everything had to compile and run on Windows and Mac. And then came Linux. First one flavor, then two, then three... Boy were we in trouble. And then MacOS 9 was replaced by OS X. And then came an ever increasing number of strange platforms. When I left, several MLoC had to run on a dozen platforms.
I bet one day that software will have to run on some 16bit embedded platform.
@Insilico Several 100kLoC of those several MLoC were an in-house library abstracting away what platform your app was running on. (This included it being a plugin in one of several popular applications.)