How do you determine what version of the C++ standard is implemented by your compiler? As far as I know, below are the standards I've known:
From the Bjarne Stroustrup C++0x FAQ:
__cplusplus
In C++0x the macro
__cplusplus
will be set to a value that differs from (is greater than) the current199711L
.
Although this isn't as helpful as one would like. gcc
(apparently for nearly 10 years) had this value set to 1
, ruling out one major compiler, until it was fixed when gcc 4.7.0 came out.
These are the C++ standards and what value you should be able to expect in __cplusplus
:
__cplusplus
is 1
.__cplusplus
is 199711L
.__cplusplus
is 201103L
.__cplusplus
is 201402L
.__cplusplus
is 201703L
.If the compiler might be an older gcc
, we need to resort to compiler specific hackery (look at a version macro, compare it to a table with implemented features) or use Boost.Config (which provides relevant macros). The advantage of this is that we actually can pick specific features of the new standard, and write a workaround if the feature is missing. This is often preferred over a wholesale solution, as some compilers will claim to implement C++11, but only offer a subset of the features.
The Stdcxx Wiki hosts a comprehensive matrix for compiler support of C++0x features (if you dare to check for the features yourself).
Unfortunately, more finely-grained checking for features (e.g. individual library functions like std::copy_if
) can only be done in the build system of your application (run code with the feature, check if it compiled and produced correct results - autoconf
is the tool of choice if taking this route).