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How to enable C++11/C++0x support in Eclipse CDT?

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How can I use C language in Eclipse?

Launch Eclipse → Help → Install New Software → In "Work with" field, pull down the drop-down menu and select "Kepler - http://download.eclipse.org/releases/kepler" (or juno for Eclipse 4.2; or helios for Eclipse 3.7). In "Name" box, expand "Programming Language" node ⇒ Check "C/C++ Development Tools" ⇒ "Next" ⇒ ...

Does Eclipse support C language?

Eclipse is popular for Java project development. It also supports C/C++, PHP, Python, Perl, and other web project developments via extensible plug-ins. Eclipse is cross-platform and runs under Windows, Linux and Mac OS.

What is CDT in Eclipse?

Eclipse CDT (C/C++ Development Tooling) The CDT Project provides a fully functional C and C++ Integrated Development Environment based on the Eclipse platform.


I found this article in the Eclipse forum, just followed those steps and it works for me. I am using Eclipse Indigo 20110615-0604 on Windows with a Cygwin setup.

  • Make a new C++ project
  • Default options for everything
  • Once created, right-click the project and go to "Properties"
  • C/C++ Build -> Settings -> Tool Settings -> GCC C++ Compiler -> Miscellaneous -> Other Flags. Put -std=c++0x (or for newer compiler version -std=c++11 at the end . ... instead of GCC C++ Compiler I have also Cygwin compiler
  • C/C++ General -> Paths and Symbols -> Symbols -> GNU C++. Click "Add..." and paste __GXX_EXPERIMENTAL_CXX0X__ (ensure to append and prepend two underscores) into "Name" and leave "Value" blank.
  • Hit Apply, do whatever it asks you to do, then hit OK.

There is a description of this in the Eclipse FAQ now as well: Eclipse FAQ/C++11 Features.

Eclipse image setting


Instruction For Eclipse CDT 4.4 Luna and 4.5 Mars

First, before creating project, configure Eclipse syntax parser:

Window -> Preferences -> C/C++ -> Build -> Settings -> Discovery -> CDT GCC Build-in Compiler Settings

in the text box entitled Command to get compiler specs append -std=c++11

Now you can create project, configuration depends on what kind of project you created:

For project created as: File -> New -> Project -> C/C++ -> C++ Project

Right click on created project and open

Properties -> C/C++ Build -> Settings -> Tool Settings -> GCC C++ Compiler -> Dialect

Put -std=c++11 into text box entitled other dialect flags or select ISO C++11 from the Language standard drop down.

For CMake project

Generate eclipse project files (inside your project)

mkdir build
cd build
cmake -G"Eclipse CDT4 - Unix Makefiles" -D CMAKE_BUILD_TYPE=Debug ..

Then import generated directory to eclipse as standard eclipse project. Right click project and open

Properties -> C/C++ General -> Preprocessor Include Paths, Marcos etc. -> Providers

enable CDT GCC Build-in Compiler Settings and move it higher than Contributed PathEntry Containers (This is important)

Last Common Step

recompile, regenerate Project ->C/C++ Index and restart Eclipse.


Update 2016:

As of gcc 6 (changes), the default C++ dialect is C++14. That means that unless you explicitly need a newer or older dialect than than, you don't need to do anything with eclipse anymore.

For Luna and Mars

This community wiki section incorporates the answer by Trismegistos;

1. Before creating project, configure Eclipse syntax parser:

Window -> Preferences -> C/C++ -> Build -> Settings -> Discovery -> CDT GCC Build-in Compiler Settings

in the text box entitled Command to get compiler specs append -std=c++14 2. Create project, configuration depends on what kind of project you created:

For project created as: File -> New -> Project -> C/C++ -> C++ Project

Right click on created project and open

Properties -> C/C++ Build -> Settings -> Tool Settings -> GCC C++ Compiler -> Dialect

Put -std=c++14 into text box entitled other dialect flags or select ISO C++11 from the Language standard drop down.

There's now a new way to solve this without the GXX_EXPERIMENTAL hack.

For most recent versions: (Currently Juno and Kepler Luna):

Under newer versions of Juno the settings are located at Project properties -> C/C++ General -> Preprocessor Include Paths, Macros etc. -> tab Providers -> CDT GCC Builtin Compiler Settings ().

Older versions 2012/2013:

  1. Under C/C++ Build (at project settings), find the Preprocessor Include Path and go to the Providers Tab. Deselect all except CDT GCC Builtin Compiler Settings. Then untag Share settings entries … . Add the option -std=c++11 to the text box called Command to get compiler specs.

  2. Go to paths and symbols. Under Symbols, click restore defaults, and then apply.


Notes:

Eclipse is picky about hitting apply, you need to do it every time you leave a settings tab.

[Self-promotion]: I wrote my own more detailed instructions based on the above. http://scrupulousabstractions.tumblr.com/post/36441490955/eclipse-mingw-builds

Thanks to the user Nobody at https://stackoverflow.com/a/13635080/1149664


For the latest (Juno) eclipse cdt the following worked for me, no need to declare __GXX_EXPERIMENTAL_CXX0X__ on myself. This works for the the CDT indexer and as parameter for the compiler:

"your project name" -> right click -> properties:

C/C++ General -> Preprocessor Include Paths, Macros etc. -> switch to the tab named "Providers":

  • for "Configuration" select "Release" (and afterwards "debug")

  • switch off all providers and just select "CDT GCC Built-in Compiler Settings"

  • uncheck "Share setting entries between projects (global provider)"

  • in the "Command to get compiler specs:" add "-std=c++11" without the quotes (may work with quotes too)

  • hit apply and close the options

  • rebuild the index

Now all the c++11 related stuff should be resolved correctly by the indexer.

win7 x64, latest official eclipse with cdt mingw-w64 gcc 4.7.2 from the mingwbuilds project on sourceforge


I had the same problem on my Eclipse Juno. These steps solved the problem :

  • Go to Project -> Properties -> C/C++ General -> Path and Symbols -> Tab [Symbols].
  • Add the symbol : __cplusplus with the value 201103L

For Eclipse CDT Kepler what worked for me to get rid of std::thread unresolved symbol is:

  1. Go to Preferences->C/C++->Build->Settings

  2. Select the Discovery tab

  3. Select CDT GCC Built-in Compiler Settings [Shared]

  4. Add the -std=c++11 to the "Command to get the compiler specs:" field such as:

${COMMAND} -E -P -v -dD -std=c++11 ${INPUTS}

  1. Ok and Rebuild Index for the project.

Adding -std=c++11 to project Properties/C/C++ Build->Settings->Tool Settings->GCC C++ Compiler->Miscellaneous->Other Flags wasn't enough for Kepler, however it was enough for older versions such as Helios.


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