This is expected to be a too specific question. That's probably because I lack some basic knowledge that I can't find by googling. Feel free to answer a more general version of the question if that makes more sense.
Given some C++ code, I would like to know whether (and then how) its specific standards version, and its C standards version (if any) correlate.
I have verfied that this test code
#include <cstdio>
int main(void)
{
printf("%ld\n", _POSIX_C_SOURCE);
return 0;
}
prints "200809" when compiled with any of "g++ -std=c++98", "g++ -std=c++11", "clang++ -std=c++98", "clang++ -std=c++11".
(When I compile C with any explicit standards version, the _POSIX_C_SOURCE macro isn't defined at all).
Why is that? What doesn't make sense at all is that compiling C++98 effects in _POSIX_C_SOURCE being 200809 (that is, 10 years later).
_GNU_SOURCE
,_BSD_SOURCE
,_POSIX_C_SOURCE
etc. macros are set by the program being compiled rather than the compiler environment. Setting them from a C++ include file is kind of a bug, although the standard library authors probably found it necessary for someinline
functions to work._POSIX_C_SOURCE
to getgetchar_unlocked()
. So is the acceptable method to first include C++ headers, then redefine _POSIX_C_SOURCE, then include C headers?getchar_unlocked()
, you use a new enough glibc and do#include <stdio.h>
.-ansi
or an explicit-std=cXX
(checked89
/90
,99
, and11
), whether it'sclang
orgcc
. I have a standard Debian wheezy amd64.