As mentioned in the title, this is a real beginner's question.
I'm realizing that after several years of CS courses and projects and such, I have never actually needed to export an executable that someone else could run without compiling the source manually (which is what most/all professors/TAs do, since they want to see your source code anyway).
So my question is basically this:
When I compile some basic C++ code (e.g. "Hello World" code), I always seem to need some sort of external DLLs to run it.
- Visual Studio needs the .NET framework.
- Cygwin needs Cygwin.dll.
- MinGW needs libgcc_s_dw2-1.dll or something similar.
So how do I simply compile an executable such that I (or someone I give the file to) can just double-click it and have it run? I'm guessing there are some fancy command line flags I can use on g++ to statically link the DLLs; I have simply never needed to do this before.
As I said twice, this is a super beginner question, and yet I could not find (easily, anyway) an answer to this question, StackOverflow or anywhere else. Largely, I think, because the search terms are so commonly used in the descriptions for other problems.
Anyway, all help is appreciated.
EDIT:
I'm literally talking about a Hello World program. e.g.:
HelloWorld.cpp:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
cout << "Hello World!" << endl;
return 0;
}