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[O] Details of compling and running C++ code from Org-mode?
From: |
Michael Hannon |
Subject: |
[O] Details of compling and running C++ code from Org-mode? |
Date: |
Sat, 5 Nov 2011 00:44:24 -0700 (PDT) |
Greetings. I'm curious about the process of executing a program that is
compiled from a source block in Org-mode.
Some background: I was playing with some C++ code (a slight generalization of
some code I found in a book). I wanted to use the "assign" method to
initialize a vector, as:
vector<int> testVec(5, 0);
testVec.assign({2, 4, 6, 8, 10});
It turns out that to do this one has to tell g++ (in my case) to use the
latest version of the C++ standard. I discovered that I could do this via:
(setq org-babel-C++-compiler "g++ -std=c++0x")
This got me to wondering if there were any similar hooks that relate to
running the program once it's compiled. I looked through the list of
org-babel* variables, but didn't find anything obvious.
So what does happen when I hit C-c C-c in, say, a cpp source-code block? The
contents of the file are evidently written to a temporary file, after which
the command specified by org-babel-C++-compiler is run on that file. The
results of the compilation are stuck some place -- another temporary file, I
suppose. Then the second, executable file is run and the results collected.
What command runs the file? Is there any control from Org-mode over this
second stage of the process?
Thanks,
-- Mike
- [O] Details of compling and running C++ code from Org-mode?,
Michael Hannon <=