Edit:
This program compiles. It's only when run does it fail to find iostream. I'm using the libclang.dylib that is bundled with Xcode.
I've written a small tool to begin working with libclang. I'm trying to parse TranslationUnits. The following program is saved in the file tool.cpp. Once compiled and run, it tries to parse tool.cpp as a TU. It's failing to get a clean run with default headers as it cannot find iostream on my Mac. After several attempts to supply arguments that point to the file, it still doesn't work. Any ideas?
#include "tool.h"
#include <iostream>
int main(int argc, char* argv[]) {
CXIndex index = clang_createIndex(0,0);
const char *args[] = {
"-I/usr/include",
"-I/usr/local/include",
"-I.",
"-I/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX.sdk/usr/include",
//Should be here
"-I/Applications/Xcode.app/Contents/Developer/Platforms/MacOSX.platform/Developer/SDKs/MacOSX.sdk/usr/include/c++/4.2.1"
}
;
Output:
tool.cpp 6:10: 'iostream' file not found
I've got the same issue. I am trying to add CPP to iOS Objective-C. It's not working. I found that this is about next "pain" from Apple because they do not use standard C++ library anymore. I've tried everything that mentioned on this site but haven't found any solution:
I'm currently working on a class assignment that requires the use of the CImg library. To be clear, the assignment is not linking the library into the program; The class is using it access the pixel data for later use in the heart of the assignment.
I'm working in Xcode (OS X 10.10). CImg (2.2.2) is installed from homebrew, and I've managed to navigate the weird way Xcode deals with search paths (added the header to the section), and have successfully-ish included CImg.
my full code is as below.
#include <iostream>
#define cimg_display 0 //I don't need X11 at all
#include "CImg.h"
using namespace cimg_library;
int main(int argc, const char * argv[]) {
// insert code here...
std::cout << "Hello, World!\n";
return 0;
}
However, I get 17 Compile-time errors from CImg.h, which are very unusual, and all of the form:
"No member named 't_normal' in the global namespace; did you mean simply 't_normal'?"
Thinking I might have received a bad download, I have attempted to redownload CImg, with no luck. I have also gotten to this same point with non-homebrew versions of CImg.
To verify the download, I also compiled the examples from the command line and they ran perfectly.
Is there a problem with CImg that I'm not aware of, a problem with Xcode that I'm not aware of, or is there something fundamental that I'm missing (definitely an option, my C-style programming is a little rusty) ?
halp pls.
Your code runs fine if you do this:
Create a new Xcode project, with:
type = "Command Line Tool"
language = "C++"
Then go to "Build Settings" and add the path to the directory containing CImg.h to your "User Header Search Paths"
code blocks 16.01 can't find headers.
I write some c++ code:
#include <iostream>
.....
int main()
{
...
}
it can be compiled without any errors or warnings, and run perfectly. But when I right-click the iostream then choose open iostream, it says that "Not found: iostream"
why? how to solve this problem?
I finally found that it's a matter of setting.
We should set the path of compiler as "...\codeblocks\MinGW\" rather than "...\codeblocks\MinGW\bin\". At meantime we should add an environment variable which is "...\codeblocks\MinGW\bin"
You're using int main function. In other words, it is waiting for a return of an integer. You can also solve this by just using void main function.
I was using Visual C++ 6.0 just now, and I keep getting this error:
fatal error C1083: Cannot open include file: 'streambuf': No such file or directory
My code is just a simple hello world program.
#include "stdafx.h"
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
cout<<"Hello World.";
return 1;
}
Then I went and checked my INCLUDE folder and found a file called STREAMBF, but the compiler was looking for STREAMBUF. Notice that the file that is present is missing the U, between the B and the F. This was from a good copy of VC++6.0, directly from the actual CD, not a pirated copy. So there should be all the files needed. But it appears that a file is missing! Is this MS being stupid again, and yet making another big mistake, and forgetting to include an important file on their CDs? I'd hate to think that every single CD for VC++6.0 that was pressed that came out of MS factories had this problem. And I know that it is a missing file, not just a misnamed file, as renaming STREAMBF to STREAMBUF just led to more errors.
Anybody know where I can find a copy of the file STREAMBUF? Or am I just overlooking something here? Is this exact error a known problem with running old copies of VC++ on modern OS's like Windows 7? Is it possible that the only reason that it's looking for STREAMBUF is that this is a newer file associated with Win7, and that if it was running in a different environment (an older OS), it would actually be looking for the correct file, STREAMBF? Can somebody help me here?
Your installation is either broken, deprecated or interpretes your code in wrong way.
You should only use older compiles if you are trying to build project developed entirely for this version.
Try to compile same code with new compiler, if you want to use VS then you should look for Visual Studio Express 2013.
Your code does not have any errors.
Modify your program to, you should be able to see it okay.
#include <iostream.h>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
cout<<"Hello World.";
return 1;
}
However,
your compiler is pretty old. You need to an upgrade.
There are C++ compilers for Windows from Microsoft Express Visual Studios Link and Info VS2013 to
some other non-Microsoft like GCC for Windows.
If you don't have installation access there are some portable c++ compilers.
Finally there are some online compilers for simple test. web based online compilers.
For my win 10 installation of VC 6.0, I had the same problem ... fatal error C1083: Cannot open include file: 'streambuf': No such file or directory
Replacing with <iostream.h> does not solve the problem.
I have checked the header file installation folder (Program files\VS98\VC98\INCLUDE). For some (unknown) reason, some file names have been changed during installation. Restoring the original name has solved the problem, in my case, in example:
Turn STREAMBF into STREAMBUF, STDXCEPT into STDEXCEPT, XCEPTION into EXCEPTION, FCTIONAL into FUNCTIONAL.
Notice: other header file names might be wrong. I have listed above the file names wrong in my installation.
I hope this may help.
I am trying to learn c++ but most of the tutorials and books I have read or looked up teaches you this...
(I am assuming like most tutorials, they are teaching in the beginning to code either in win32 console or CLR console. In either case the following does not work.)
#include <iostream>
int main( )
{
std::cout << "Hello World\n";
return (0);
}
The IDE that i have is Visual C++ 2008 Express edition and they accept code like this
#include "stdafx.h"
int _tmain(int argc, _TCHAR* argv[])
{
return 0;
}
Or like this
#include "stdafx.h"
using namespace System;
int main(array<System::String ^> ^args)
{
Console::WriteLine(L"Hello World");
return 0;
}
Honestly I do not no the difference in none of these and I am not sure if I should just download a older compiler so that it works. If someone can tell me what the difference in these are and where to go from there. That will help tremendously. Thanks
[Edited]
I am trying to do a simple hello world. But I get the error "system can not find path specified." I have screenshot that shows what the error looks like. It also is saying that my project is out of date when I clearly save the file before I build it. Apparently it can not find the executable file. I went to the debug fold and did not see any .exe file.
[Edited]
Ok, now When I try to build the project I get the following errors
1>------ Rebuild All started: Project: test, Configuration: Debug Win32 ------
1>Deleting intermediate and output files for project 'test', configuration 'Debug|Win32'
1>Compiling...
1>stdafx.cpp
1>Compiling...
1>test.cpp
1>c:\users\numerical25\desktop\test\test\test.cpp(1) : warning C4627: '#include <iostream>': skipped when looking for precompiled header use
1> Add directive to 'stdafx.h' or rebuild precompiled header
1>c:\users\numerical25\desktop\test\test\test.cpp(6) : error C2653: 'std' : is not a class or namespace name
1>c:\users\numerical25\desktop\test\test\test.cpp(6) : error C2065: 'cout' : undeclared identifier
1>Build log was saved at "file://c:\Users\numerical25\Desktop\test\test\Debug\BuildLog.htm"
1>test - 2 error(s), 1 warning(s)
========== Rebuild All: 0 succeeded, 1 failed, 0 skipped ==========
Here is the code I used
#include <iostream>
#include "stdafx.h"
int main( )
{
std::cout << "Hello World\n";
return (0);
}
Note: I tried using it with and without the #include "stdafx.h" When I tried it without the #include "stdafx.h", it said I might be missing it.
Not sure what you're asking. The first two examples you gave are valid C++ programs that should (will) compile with VC++. The third example is a C++/CLI program that must be compiled with the /CLR compiler switch (this is called Managed C++).
EDIT: Adding more specific information (from a comment below):
The first two examples are standard (native) C++ (albeit, the second example has MS-proprietary macros). They compile to native code. The third is C++/CLI (a "managed" extension to C++). It compiles to managed (.NET) code. Only the third snippet interacts with the .NET framework in any way. All three are absolutely buildable and runnable using the appropriate projects in VS 2008 (no command line necessary)!
Based on your latest update, it looks like you have probably modified some project properties and changed some paths. The app is building, but when you try to run it via VS (you should do this with <Ctrl>+F5, by the way), the executable cannot be found (there are several ways you could have messed this up by changing or playing with various settings).
Please note the difference between building and running. Building is the process of compiling and linking your source code. Running is launching the resulting executable. You seem to be confused between these (judging from your complaints about the "...out of date" dialog box). It is normal to get the "...out of date" dialog box if you try to run without rebuilding after you have made a change to the project (even if that change is saved). Just make sure you click "yes." You need to build the project before you can run it.
My recommendation is to completely delete your project and solution. Create a new empty project, as suggested elsewhere in this now-very-heavyweight thread, and don't modify any project settings. If this doesn't work, something is seriously wrong!
ANOTHER EDIT: Just for completion, since this question kept changing:
As others have already pointed out, your ultimate problem with the first snippet is the use of precompiled headers (PCH). PCH are turned on by default in new VS C++ projects. Their purpose is to speed compilation when many implementation files include the same set of headers -- preventing the compiler from having to parse the header files for each compilation unit.
You have three options:
(Recommended) Disable PCH -- Project Properties --> Configuration Properties --> C/C++ --> Precompiled Headers: Set Create/Use Precompiled Header to Not Using Precompiled Headers. (You don't need to do anything with the "stdafx.h" file or the #include for it.)
Place your commonly used #includes in "stdafx.h". In your case, you would put #include <iostream> in "stdafx.h".
Place your #includes after `#include "stdafx.h". Microsoft requires that the "stdafx.h" be the first included file in a compilation unit.
A minor point, which I don't see elsewhere in the answers: When using precompiled headers, such as your stdafx.h, you need to include them first. Change it to:
#include "stdafx.h"
#include <iostream>
and that should fix the errors about it.
Alternatively, it may be easier to simply switch off precompiled headers: Project > Properties > Configuration Properties > C/C++ > Precompiled Headers > Switch first option to "Not using precompiled headers". They can be useful for big projects but will just be awkward and annoying while you're learning, since they have extra rules (like this "must be included first") which aren't requirements of standard C++ .
The "difference" is pedantic. The latter are just Microsoft-specific entry points.
As you are learning C++, I recommend you use a compiler, and preferably an operating system that lets you focus on C++, and not the platform. For this I recommend g++, on an Linux distribution such as Ubuntu.
Try this tutorial, there are many others that are similar that quickly let you overcome being tied to the tools, and focus on C++.
int main();
int main(int argc, char* argv[]);
These are standard C++.
int _tmain(int argc, _TCHAR* argv[]);
int wmain(int argc, wchar_t* argv[]);
These are Windows-specific to handle Unicode arguments. See What is the difference between _tmain() and main() in C++?.
int main(array<System::String^>^ args);
This is not C++. This is C++/CLI.
For best portability, always use the first form.
Also,
int main(int argc, char** argv, char** envp);
This is a usually seen POSIX extension. Windows supports this form of main too. The envp means (pointer to) environment variables.
int main(int argc, char** argv, char** envp, char** apple);
This is for Mac only, obviously.
void main();
And this is wrong (nonstandard, some compilers (e.g. gcc) will reject it).
Visual C++ Express will compile the first example just fine.
However, you need to ensure the proper project settings:
Create an "Empty Project"
"Add a new item..." to the project via the "Project" menu. Select C++ (.cpp) file.
Copy/Paste code into new file
Press F5 to compile and run.
When "Project is out of date" dialog appears, press "Yes" (build the project)
The steps above ensure VC++ Express does not treat your file as a special Win32/Windows console application.
EDIT: added additional step 5 to prevent "Can't find..." dialog.
I managed to get the same dialog by making sure the exe file does not exist, and answering "No" to the build dialog. With a clean, empty project the exe file does not exist yet. It must be built first. If you answer "no" don't build it, VC++ dutifully does not build the exe and later complains about not being able to find it when it tries to run it later.
As STingRaySC pointed out, all three of your examples will compile in VC2008 express; it's just that examples 2 and 3 are what VC2008 Express will load up initially when you create a project (one of the examples is for Managed C++, as STingRaySC mentioned).
You can just delete the code in your second example (the C++ Win32 Console Application project) and paste in the more standard hello world program from your first example. It should compile and run just fine in VC2008 Express - it did for me.
I. Precompiled header
#include "stdafx.h"
is some kind of tricky stuff that comes your way.
If you create a project VC will normally switch on precompiled header.
This means that one header stdafx.h is created which is compiled only once.
This is done to speed up compile time in big environments. If you start C++
it will confuse you.
If you use stdafx.h it has to be the first header in the cpp file.
II. Unicode (Utf16)
int _tmain(int argc, _TCHAR* argv[])
Microsoft uses UTF16 to implement unicode strings.
This means you get two versions of main.
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
int main(int argc, wchar_t* argv[])
This is also confusing if you start.
To simply start you can use whatever editor you want.
Create the file.
Open a Visdual studio 2008 command prompt
cl main.cpp
main.exe
and you will see Hello World using code from books.
Afterwards try to understand some of the settings of VC.
But you should always use an empty project.
Else you have to care about stdafx, UNICODE, ...
_tmain with the _TCHAR argv is the way the C runtime allows you to handle unicode. If _UNICODE is defined, then _tmain will expand to wmain, and the _TCHAR argument will be of type wchar_t. If _UNICODE is not defined, then _tmain will expand to main, which will be the ANSI standard.
Therefore, so long as _UNICODE is not defined, the second snippet you posted is compliant with the standard.
Lots of waxing lyrical and some misinformation for you sift through already, but I suggest following wonsungi's advice. But to clarify his advice:
File->New->Project
Select Project Type "Win32", then Template "Win32 Console Project"
Give the project a name and location
OK
Select "Application Settings"
Check "Empty Project"
In the "Solution Explorer", right click the "Sources" folder, then Add->New Item
Type the name of the file, in the "name" box using a .cpp extension (you can ignore the templates if you wish).
Enter your code in the new file.
Woot!! I figured it out!!! Below is my original code
#include <iostream>
int main( )
{
std::cout << "Hello World\n";
return (0);
}
It was missing the header file #include "stdafx.h" . So I had to include it in there so I added it like this
#include <iostream>
#include "stdafx.h"
int main( )
{
std::cout << "Hello World\n";
return (0);
}
I was still getting an error like what you see in my edited question at the bottom. So What I did is I took #include and added it in my header file and then it worked!!!!!
Even the the books and alot of tutorials show to add #include to the actual cpp, for some reason in express edition I had to add it to header for it to work. I don't know WHY but it's a solution and now it works.
Download and install Dev-C++ on your system. If the code doesn't work on Visual C++, try it out on Dev-C++ (which uses the GCC compiler). You may get the same results or a different error message. Whenever you get an error message you don't understand, do a Internet search for the error message.