I want to compile my C++ files with mingw-g++ in command prompt. My C++ files have OGRE3D libraries also. How can I add these OGRE3D libaries in makefile.
For example after I compile my files in command prompt I get an error like this ; OgreEntity.h :No such file or directory
To your g++, you should give options. Some useful options are:
-I/path/to/library/include This tells the compiler to look for library
headers in this folder also
-L/path/to/library/lib This tells the compiler to look for library's lib file.
For example, let's say it's called libBerzos.a
-lLibname This tells the compiler to which library it should link. In the
example above, you would write -lBarzos
For example, let's say I have written a library myself named shSGL. I have the files in C:\shSGL
Then if I want to compile a file using it, I would compile it like this:
g++ -c -o file.o file.cpp -IC:/shSGL/include
and build the executable with
g++ -o exec file.o -LC:/shSGL/lib -lshSGL
See this Makefile for a real example.
If you want to learn more about g++ options, just search for man g++ in google and the first site would be this.
Related
I was lately using SDL and now i want to put the .exe file in a specific directory so it looks cleaner, somebody knows how to do that?
When compiling with g++, gcc, or many other similar compilers, you specify the output file with the -o flag.
For example, to set the output file as foo.exe in the parent directory, you would call g++ like this:
g++ [other options/source files here] -o ../foo.exe
I've just inherited some C++ code that was written poorly with one cpp file which contained the main and a bunch of other functions. There are also .h files that contain classes and their function definitions.
Until now the program was compiled using the command g++ main.cpp. Now that I've separated the classes to .h and .cpp files do I need to use a makefile or can I still use the g++ main.cpp command?
list all the other cpp files after main.cpp.
ie
g++ main.cpp other.cpp etc.cpp
and so on.
Or you can compile them all individually. You then link all the resulting ".o" files together.
To compile separately without linking you need to add -c option:
g++ -c myclass.cpp
g++ -c main.cpp
g++ myclass.o main.o
./a.out
Now that I've separated the classes to .h and .cpp files do I need to use a makefile or can I still use the "g++ main.cpp" command?
Compiling several files at once is a poor choice if you are going to put that into the Makefile.
Normally in a Makefile (for GNU/Make), it should suffice to write that:
# "all" is the name of the default target, running "make" without params would use it
all: executable1
# for C++, replace CC (c compiler) with CXX (c++ compiler) which is used as default linker
CC=$(CXX)
# tell which files should be used, .cpp -> .o make would do automatically
executable1: file1.o file2.o
That way make would be properly recompiling only what needs to be recompiled. One can also add few tweaks to generate the header file dependencies - so that make would also properly rebuild what's need to be rebuilt due to the header file changes.
.h files will nothing to do with compiling ... you only care about cpp files... so type g++ filename1.cpp filename2.cpp main.cpp -o myprogram
means you are compiling each cpp files and then linked them together into myprgram.
then run your program ./myprogram
I know this question has been asked years ago but still wanted to share how I usually compile multiple c++ files.
Let's say you have 5 cpp files, all you have to do is use the * instead of typing each cpp files name E.g g++ -c *.cpp -o myprogram.
This will generate "myprogram"
run the program ./myprogram
that's all!!
The reason I'm using * is that what if you have 30 cpp files would you type all of them? or just use the * sign and save time :)
p.s Use this method only if you don't care about makefile.
You can still use g++ directly if you want:
g++ f1.cpp f2.cpp main.cpp
where f1.cpp and f2.cpp are the files with the functions in them. For details of how to use make to do the build, see the excellent GNU make documentation.
As rebenvp said I used:
g++ *.cpp -o output
And then do this for output:
./output
But a better solution is to use make file. Read here to know more about make files.
Also make sure that you have added the required .h files in the .cpp files.
You can use several g++ commands and then link, but the easiest is to use a traditional Makefile or some other build system: like Scons (which are often easier to set up than Makefiles).
If you want to use #include <myheader.hpp> inside your cpp files you can use:
g++ *.cpp -I. -o out
I used to use a custom Makefile that compiled all the files in current directory, but I had to copy it in every directory I needed it, everytime.
So I created my own tool - Universal Compiler which made the process much easier when compile many files.
You can do that using a single command assuming all the needed .cpp and .h files are in the same folder.
g++ *.cpp *.h -Wall && ./a.out
It will compile and execute at the same time.
when using compiler in the command line, you should take of the following:
you need not compile a header file, since header file gets substituted in the script where include directive is used.
you will require to compile and link the implementation and the script file.
for example let cow.h be header file and cow.cpp be implementation file and cow.cc(c++ files can have extension .cpp, .cc, .cxx, .C, .CPP, .cp) be script file.
Since gcc compiler notation for c++ file is g++, we can compile and link the files using
$g++ -g -Wall cow.cpp cow.cc -o cow.out
options '-g' and '-Wall' are for debugging info and getting warning for errors. Here cow.out is the name of the executable binary file that we can execute to run the program. it is always good to name your executable file otherwise name will be automatically given which might be confusing at times.
you can also do the same by using makefiles, makefiles will detect, compile and link automatically the specified files.
There are great resources for compilation using command line
enter link description here
~/In_ProjectDirectory $ g++ coordin_main.cpp coordin_func.cpp coordin.h
~/In_ProjectDirectory $ ./a.out
... Worked!!
Using Linux Mint with Geany IDE
When I saved each file to the same directory, one file was not saved correctly within the directory; the coordin.h file. So, rechecked and it was saved there as coordin.h, and not incorrectly as -> coordin.h.gch. The little stuff.
Arg!!
I have a CUDA C++ project I am writing and compiling using Eclipse Nsight. My goal is to end up with an executable from the file that contains the main function, then to produce an individual shared library for each class in the project without needing to compile outside of the IDE. I can do this by creating a project for each class, then including all of them in the main project, but I would like a way to write all the files in a single Eclipse project and still end up with the desired artifacts. The project structure is as follows:
ClassA.h
ClassA.cu
ClassB.h
ClassB.cu
main.cpp
I am looking to compile the project and end up with the following artifacts:
ClassA.so
ClassB.so
main.exe
Ideally, I would like to know if there is a way to group specific files and set the compiler options for just that group of files. i.e.
nvcc ClassA.cu -shared -fPIC -o ClassA.so
nvcc ClassB.cu -shared -fPIC -o ClassB.so
g++ main.cpp -lClassA.so -lClassB.so -o main.exe
I know this is an unusual request, but this is part of a larger project architecture I am trying to bring from the land of emacs and compile shell scripts into the world of IDEs.
Option A: Write and maintain a custom make file.
Option B: Create 3 projects - exe and two shared libraries.
I already asked how to call a C++ constructor from a C file in How to call a C++ constructor from a C-File. Now when I successfully apply these methods suggested there, I receive an error
fatal error: string: No such file or directory compilation terminated
this error message points to the line: #include <string> in a header of a .cpp file.
I already found out that <string> is used by c++/g++ and <string.h> by c/gcc. Well the problem got clearer, when I checked the console output and there I can see, the (.cpp) file with the error was called by the gcc, which actually expects the <string.h> but that's not my intention - I need to compile it with the g++.
Now my question is: Can I force Eclipse to use a specific compiler? Here, for example just g++ (I heared it is capable of C-code too.) - Or even better, is there a way to chose the compiler for each directory in the workspace ?
Thanks for your advises
Answer respecting the wish of being able to specify the compiler for every subfolder:
What you are searching is probably a makefile project. That allows you to specify the toolchain, being for example the preprocessor, compiler and linker. g++ is an example for such a toolchain, as much as clang++ would be.
You can generate such a project in eclipse, writing the makefiles by hand, or use some build environment, such as CMake, which I would recommend for better portable code.
Both solutions would allow you to specify the compiler, as well as the compile flags, for every single directory of your project, if you wished so.
Writing a makefile for your existing C/C++ project can be achieved by completing the following steps:
in the folder where your source file is, right click and create a new file. New > File
name it makefile and click Finish
The new makefile should pop up in the editor and can be filled like follows:
makefile:
all: executable_name
clean:
-rm main.o executable_name[.exe on windows] executable_name
executable_name: main.o
g++ -g -o executable_name main.o
main.o: main.cpp
g++ -c -g main.cpp
Change Project's Setting can force eclipse to compile using g++:
I've just inherited some C++ code that was written poorly with one cpp file which contained the main and a bunch of other functions. There are also .h files that contain classes and their function definitions.
Until now the program was compiled using the command g++ main.cpp. Now that I've separated the classes to .h and .cpp files do I need to use a makefile or can I still use the g++ main.cpp command?
list all the other cpp files after main.cpp.
ie
g++ main.cpp other.cpp etc.cpp
and so on.
Or you can compile them all individually. You then link all the resulting ".o" files together.
To compile separately without linking you need to add -c option:
g++ -c myclass.cpp
g++ -c main.cpp
g++ myclass.o main.o
./a.out
Now that I've separated the classes to .h and .cpp files do I need to use a makefile or can I still use the "g++ main.cpp" command?
Compiling several files at once is a poor choice if you are going to put that into the Makefile.
Normally in a Makefile (for GNU/Make), it should suffice to write that:
# "all" is the name of the default target, running "make" without params would use it
all: executable1
# for C++, replace CC (c compiler) with CXX (c++ compiler) which is used as default linker
CC=$(CXX)
# tell which files should be used, .cpp -> .o make would do automatically
executable1: file1.o file2.o
That way make would be properly recompiling only what needs to be recompiled. One can also add few tweaks to generate the header file dependencies - so that make would also properly rebuild what's need to be rebuilt due to the header file changes.
.h files will nothing to do with compiling ... you only care about cpp files... so type g++ filename1.cpp filename2.cpp main.cpp -o myprogram
means you are compiling each cpp files and then linked them together into myprgram.
then run your program ./myprogram
I know this question has been asked years ago but still wanted to share how I usually compile multiple c++ files.
Let's say you have 5 cpp files, all you have to do is use the * instead of typing each cpp files name E.g g++ -c *.cpp -o myprogram.
This will generate "myprogram"
run the program ./myprogram
that's all!!
The reason I'm using * is that what if you have 30 cpp files would you type all of them? or just use the * sign and save time :)
p.s Use this method only if you don't care about makefile.
You can still use g++ directly if you want:
g++ f1.cpp f2.cpp main.cpp
where f1.cpp and f2.cpp are the files with the functions in them. For details of how to use make to do the build, see the excellent GNU make documentation.
As rebenvp said I used:
g++ *.cpp -o output
And then do this for output:
./output
But a better solution is to use make file. Read here to know more about make files.
Also make sure that you have added the required .h files in the .cpp files.
You can use several g++ commands and then link, but the easiest is to use a traditional Makefile or some other build system: like Scons (which are often easier to set up than Makefiles).
If you want to use #include <myheader.hpp> inside your cpp files you can use:
g++ *.cpp -I. -o out
I used to use a custom Makefile that compiled all the files in current directory, but I had to copy it in every directory I needed it, everytime.
So I created my own tool - Universal Compiler which made the process much easier when compile many files.
You can do that using a single command assuming all the needed .cpp and .h files are in the same folder.
g++ *.cpp *.h -Wall && ./a.out
It will compile and execute at the same time.
when using compiler in the command line, you should take of the following:
you need not compile a header file, since header file gets substituted in the script where include directive is used.
you will require to compile and link the implementation and the script file.
for example let cow.h be header file and cow.cpp be implementation file and cow.cc(c++ files can have extension .cpp, .cc, .cxx, .C, .CPP, .cp) be script file.
Since gcc compiler notation for c++ file is g++, we can compile and link the files using
$g++ -g -Wall cow.cpp cow.cc -o cow.out
options '-g' and '-Wall' are for debugging info and getting warning for errors. Here cow.out is the name of the executable binary file that we can execute to run the program. it is always good to name your executable file otherwise name will be automatically given which might be confusing at times.
you can also do the same by using makefiles, makefiles will detect, compile and link automatically the specified files.
There are great resources for compilation using command line
enter link description here
~/In_ProjectDirectory $ g++ coordin_main.cpp coordin_func.cpp coordin.h
~/In_ProjectDirectory $ ./a.out
... Worked!!
Using Linux Mint with Geany IDE
When I saved each file to the same directory, one file was not saved correctly within the directory; the coordin.h file. So, rechecked and it was saved there as coordin.h, and not incorrectly as -> coordin.h.gch. The little stuff.
Arg!!