Mail Archives: djgpp/2000/04/07/15:31:27
Uhmm, what about
#include <iostream>
.
.
.
using namespace std
int main( )
{
cout...
cin...
}
?
Besides, Maybe you have got problems with those miserable DOS 8.3
filenames, so headerfiles are truncated and can not be found by the
compiler (like streambuf.h, its 9.3)
Solution: unzip the packages with an unzip that can handle long filenames
WBR
SW
On Sat, 25 Mar 2000, ervin nesimovic wrote:
> Hello!
> You should lose that with <iostream.h> use
> #include <iostream>
> int main()
> {
> std::cout<<"Hello world"<<endl;
> }
>
> std is a new standard so you should write it allways when you are writing
> cin or cout
> std::cout<<
> std::cin>>
> And skip \n couse that may couse some trouble later if you decide to
> programe more in djgpp
> /ervin
> ----- Original Message -----
> From: "Bruce Bales" <bbales AT kscable DOT com>
> Newsgroups: comp.os.msdos.djgpp
> To: <djgpp AT delorie DOT com>
> Sent: Friday, March 24, 2000 11:52 PM
> Subject: Compile hello world
>
>
> > Running windows 98 on pentium 200. 48 meg memory.
> >
> > Installed DJGPP with no hitches. Tried "Hello World" program.
> > #include <iostream.h>
> > int main()
> > {
> > cout<<"Hello, World\n";
> > return 0;
> > }
> >
> > Got error message" c:/djgpp/include/iostream.h(31) Error: streambuf.h:
> > no such file or directory."
> > Tried the FAQs and readme's. Can't find answer.
> >
> > Streambuf.h is in the include directory, along with iostream.h.
> > Tried in MS/DOS and with RHIDE. same result. Reinstalled twice from
> > CDROM and once from a download from delorie.com. Always same result,
> > except for include location called out. Always lists the right
> > location, but says stringbuf.h doesn't exist.
> >
> > In downloaded version, both iostream.h and streambuf.h are in
> > \gpp2952b\lang\cxx\.
> > I'm working from "Learn C++ in 24 hours" and 15 hours is used up -
> > Help.
> > Bruce Bales
> >
>
>
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