What is the difference between g++ and gcc? Which ones should be used for general c++ development?
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gcc is 'Gnu Compiler Collection'. If you pass it a C++ file, it will invoke the C++ compiler ('g++') behind the scenes. gcc is essentially the frontend for several compilers and the linker too. Edit: As several people pointed out, this doesn't mean that 'gcc' and 'g++' are interchangeable for c++ files: gcc will invoke g++ with different arguments to what you'd get if you'd invoked g++ directly. |
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For c++ you should use g++. It's the same compiler (e.g. the GNU compiler collection). GCC or G++ just choose a different front-end with different default options. In a nutshell: if you use g++ the frontend will tell the linker that you may want to link with the C++ standard libraries. The gcc frontend won't do that (also it could link with them if you pass the right command line options). |
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The only notable difference is that i you pass a .c to gcc it will compile as C, whereas g++ will always treat it as C++ |
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Although the gcc and g++ commands do very similar things, g++ is designed to be the command you'd invoke to compile a C++ program; it's intended to automatically do the right thing. Behind the scenes, they're really the same program. As I understand, both decide whether to compile a program as C or as C++ based on the filename extension. Both are capable of linking against the C++ standard library, but only g++ does this by default. So if you have a program written in C++ that doesn't happen to need to link against the standard library, gcc will happen to do the right thing; but then, so would g++. So there's really no reason not to use g++ for general C++ development. |
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GCC: GNU Compiler Collection
gcc: GNU C Compiler The main differences:
Extra Macros when compiling *.cpp files:
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