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From: | "Andrew Crabtree" <andrewc AT rosemail DOT rose DOT hp DOT com> |
Newsgroups: | comp.os.msdos.djgpp |
Subject: | Re: <string.h> |
Date: | Thu, 12 Feb 1998 10:33:16 -0800 |
Organization: | Hewlett Packard |
Lines: | 11 |
Message-ID: | <6bvf9e$65f$1@rosenews.rose.hp.com> |
References: | <3 DOT 0 DOT 5 DOT 32 DOT 19980211115618 DOT 007ecc60 AT mail DOT kudos DOT net> <34E22910 DOT F245ED05 AT cornell DOT edu> <34E2DB56 DOT 5515BABD AT LSTM DOT Ruhr-UNI-Bochum DOT De> <34E2F36B DOT 37071F81 AT cornell DOT edu> |
NNTP-Posting-Host: | ros51675cra.rose.hp.com |
Mime-Version: | 1.0 |
To: | djgpp AT delorie DOT com |
DJ-Gateway: | from newsgroup comp.os.msdos.djgpp |
A. Sinan Unur wrote in message <34E2F36B DOT 37071F81 AT cornell DOT edu>... > AFAIK >_string.h (i.e. String.h) is for the GNU String class, as opposed to >string which is supposed to be the C++ standard header. I don't know the exact differences between the two header files, but you do not get a string class from <string>. It is only defined in <_string.h> (String.h). If you use <string> the program still won't compile. At least in my setup, which is probably the worst one to base things off of :)
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