what are the major C++ compilers?
I'm putting together some SDL tutorials and I want to expand the setting up SDL tutorial and the SDL extension library tutorial.
This is currently the compilers/IDEs I plan to cover:
Windows
------------------
Dev C++ (done)
Code::Blocks
Borland
MS Visual C++ 6.0
MS Visual C++.NET
Linux
------------------
KDevelop
Anjuta
Eclipse
Code::Blocks
g++ command line
Mac OS X
------------------
XCode
Eclipse
CodeWarrior
g++ command line
Is there any ones I'm forgetting?
Also if I didn't cover your OS of choice, sorry these are the only OSes I have access to.
If you're covering IDEs seperately you may want to consider both Borland C++ Builder and Borland's command line tools as two different entities.
If you going to cover g++ from the command line for linux and OS X, you should consdier mentioning makefiles and make. And possibly emacs.
Quote:Original post by Horatius83
Eclipse with the CDT plugin?
IIRC, the CDT plugin only works on x86 machines.
Don't waste your time with Codewarrior. It's dead. Also, be sure that a person who follows your instructions will create Universal binaries by default.
Quote:Original post by RoboguyQuote:Original post by Horatius83
Eclipse with the CDT plugin?
IIRC, the CDT plugin only works on x86 machines.
Which is like saying Windows only works on x86 machines. Pretty offtopic. And I'd be suprised, given that it's coded in Java, and does all it's C++ compiling/debugging using external tools. Could be wrong though.
Quote:Original post by MaulingMonkeyQuote:Original post by RoboguyQuote:Original post by Horatius83
Eclipse with the CDT plugin?
IIRC, the CDT plugin only works on x86 machines.
Which is like saying Windows only works on x86 machines. Pretty offtopic. And I'd be suprised, given that it's coded in Java, and does all it's C++ compiling/debugging using external tools. Could be wrong though.
I mentioned it because the OP listed "Eclipse" under OS X (Eclipse itself works on OS X, but not the CDT plugin). On a second look, it appears that it works on machines other than x86s, but it doesn't work on PPCs.
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