If you ask for any other way to combine 2008 and 2010 libraries in one executable other than moving 2010 part outside into a DLL, than the answer is probably "there is no other easy way to achieve this".
But if you don't want to "VC++ 2010 run-time libraries ... under VS 2008" (that is building against 2010 libraries in old 2008 IDE), but "use a 2010-compiled DLL in your 2008-compiled program", it is perfectly possible.
The easiest way, as we do it in our projects, is to build (both .exe and DLL) against statically linked standard libraries (MFC, if you use it) and then use LoadLibrary
in your .exe to load the DLL. In the DLL you can export (_declspec (dllexport)
) a function (preferably inside extern "C" {}
guards) and use it in the .exe through GetProcAddress
.
Static linkage and explicit loading save you from a lot of inconsistency bugs caused by different runtimes.
If you are worried about DLL loading and function calling costs, you can try to make these calls as rare as possible (maybe by moving not only the algorithm, but also some more high-level logics into the DLL). See this issie too.
And you can build all your code in one IDE (2010) using native multitargeting (however you will still need to build you main app and DLL separately against v9 and v10 libraries respectively).