How to compile C++ with C++11 support in Mac Terminal

4ae1e1 picture 4ae1e1 · Jan 9, 2013 · Viewed 88.6k times · Source

I wanted to compile C++11 source code within Mac Terminal but failed. I tried g++ -std=c++11, g++ -std=c++0x, g++ -std=gnu++11 and g++ -std=gnu++0x but nothing worked. Terminal always read unrecognized command line option. However, g++ -std=gnu and things like that worked fine (of course C++11 source code could not pass).

Which option should I use to turn on C++11 support?

By the way, the command line tool I'm using is installed within Xcode, and I'm pretty sure that they are up-to-date.

Answer

bames53 picture bames53 · Jan 9, 2013

As others have pointed out you should use clang++ rather than g++. Also, you should use the libc++ library instead of the default libstdc++; The included version of libstdc++ is quite old and therefore does not include C++11 library features.

clang++ -std=c++11 -stdlib=libc++ -Weverything main.cpp

If you haven't installed the command line tools for Xcode you can run the compiler and other tools without doing that by using the xcrun tool.

xcrun clang++ -std=c++11 -stdlib=libc++ -Weverything main.cpp

Also if there's a particular warning you want to disable you can pass additional flags to the compiler to do so. At the end of the warning messages it shows you the most specific flag that would enable the warning. To disable that warning you prepend no- to the warning name.

For example you probably don't want the c++98 compatibility warnings. At the end of those warnings it shows the flag -Wc++98-compat and to disable them you pass -Wno-c++98-compat.