hello altogether,
my name is Wolfram Pagels, Berlin, Germany
my status is :retired but enthusiastic c++-fan;
- Windows 10 Dev Environment Setup
- Javascript Dev Environment
- Dev Environment Setup
- Windows Dev Environment Setup
- Microsoft Dev Environments
- Windows 10 Dev Environment
The Dev C package works great right “out of the box” for compiling programs for the windows archeture, but with a little work it can be configured to work with the wide range of cross-compilers the GNU tool chain offers. Preliminary Steps and Notes The first step to getting the Dev C to work is to setup the compiler environment; this. Dev-C is a free IDE for Windows that uses either MinGW or TDM-GCC as underlying compiler. Originally released by Bloodshed Software, but abandoned in 2006, it has recently been forked by Orwell, including a choice of more recent compilers. /uad-antares-auto-tune-realtime-fl-studio.html. May 03, 2007 This project can now be found here. Summary Files Reviews Support Wiki Mailing Lists.
I use Dev-C++ since 3 month ago; in the 70th I programmed in Fortran;
after a long break I enjoy to learn c++11;
Windows 10 Dev Environment Setup
e.g.: the day before yesterday I got the following message from Dev-C++:
My second question to you: * h o w to enable (these) options at my installed and running actual mingw compiler as part of Dev-C++ IDE ?
Javascript Dev Environment
Thank you in advance for your time,
Dev Environment Setup
yours sincerely
- 4 Contributors
- forum 3 Replies
- 3,677 Views
- 23 Hours Discussion Span
- commentLatest Postby Ancient DragonLatest Post
mike_2000_172,669
Windows Dev Environment Setup
Microsoft Dev Environments
Well, the answer to your problem (but not to your question) is to change your IDE. Dev-C++ is far too old to support C++11. The MinGW GCC version that ships with Dev-C++ is version 3.4.2, which is really old. Decent support for C++11 starts roughly from 4.6.0, but since it is still experimental, the newer the better. Currently, you can get 4.7.1 version through '>TDM-GCC ports. I recommend switching to '>CodeBlocks, which you can download as an installer that includes TDM-GCC 4.7.1. That should allow you to have decent C++11 support.
Windows 10 Dev Environment
As for setting compiler options, you typically have to navigate the 'Build Configuration' or 'Project Properties' or similar panels. Usually, you will find a place to put 'custom compiler options' where you can place the exact command-line compiler option (like -std=c++11
), that is, if you can't find a checkbox for the particular option you need.