问题
So I decided to give c++ a try today. I downloaded MinGw and the g++ compiler that comes with it. I decided to test the following code:
#include <iostream>
#include <thread>
int foo()
{
std::cout << "foo" << std::endl;
}
int main()
{
std::thread t1(foo);
t1.join();
std::cout << "done" << std::endl;
return 0;
}
I then tried to compile it on the command line using the following line:
g++ -std=c++11 main.cpp
Which works for hello world. This time however, it gave me this error:
error: 'thread' is not a member of 'std'
I tried the exact same code using the g++ provided by cygwin, and it works. So why doesn't it work in MinGw? Is it outdated or something? I want to compile stuff using c++11 and c++14 like on the cygwin terminal, but outside of the cygwin environment.
回答1:
MinGW-w64 (or rather GCC on windows) needs to be compiled with posix thread support if you want to use std::thread
, presumably you downloaded a build with native windows threads.
Check out the mingw-builds folders targeting 64 bit or 32 bit and pick a version with posix threads. You'll also need to choose the exception handling method, if you don't have a reason to choose otherwise then stick with the GCC defaults of seh for 64 bit and dwarf for 32.
回答2:
I tested this in linux (cross-compiling).
This compiles ok,
i686-w64-mingw32-g++-posix -std=c++11 threads.cpp -lwinpthread
this does not
i686-w64-mingw32-g++-win32 -std=c++11 threads.cpp -lwinpthread
The difference between the compilers is --enable-threads=win32
vs. --enable-threads=posix
option used when the compilers were built. g++ -v
should show what was used.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/34847804/stdthread-works-in-cygwin-but-not-in-mingw