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Standard Template Library: Difference between revisions

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For [[VAC 3.0 Compiler and Linker|Visual Age C++ 3.0]] some older versions of [http://www.stlport.org STLport] reportedly have been usable, something around version 3.0 (see archive at the STLport site). However, the latest versions are not useable any more, mainly because the compiler does not support advanced features like namespaces (it isn't yet ISO C++ 99 compliant!) and also because the template implementation does not work together with what the STL assumes.
For [[VAC 3.0 Compiler and Linker|Visual Age C++ 3.0]] some older versions of [http://www.stlport.org STLport] reportedly have been usable, something around version 3.0 (see archive at the STLport site). However, the latest versions are not useable any more, mainly because the compiler does not support advanced features like namespaces (it isn't yet ISO C++ 99 compliant!) and also because the template implementation does not work together with what the STL assumes.


The STl was not much used on OS/2 in its heyday in the 1990's as the library was buggy and covered similar ground as a number of [[IBM]] libraries.
The STl was not much used on OS/2 in its heyday in the 1990's as the library was buggy and covered similar ground as a number of [[IBM]] libraries such as [[OpenClass]].


==Version==
==Version==

Revision as of 11:58, 13 August 2016

The Standard Template Library (STL) is a C++ library originally developed at Hewlett-Packard that was later made part of the ISO C++ 99 standard as the C++ Standard Library with some additions and modifications, so all compilers complying to that standard should support it or even have it included already.

This is certainly true for the latest versions of GCC.

For Visual Age C++ 3.0 some older versions of STLport reportedly have been usable, something around version 3.0 (see archive at the STLport site). However, the latest versions are not useable any more, mainly because the compiler does not support advanced features like namespaces (it isn't yet ISO C++ 99 compliant!) and also because the template implementation does not work together with what the STL assumes.

The STl was not much used on OS/2 in its heyday in the 1990's as the library was buggy and covered similar ground as a number of IBM libraries such as OpenClass.

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* Latest Version for OS/2-eCS:

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