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Date:      Tue, 26 Aug 1997 23:21:40 +0200
From:      Peter Korsten <peter@grendel.IAEhv.nl>
To:        freebsd-chat@freebsd.org
Subject:   Re: ATT Unix for Windows !
Message-ID:  <19970826232140.15125@grendel.IAEhv.nl>
In-Reply-To: <199708261537.LAA24177@gatekeeper.itribe.net>; from Jamie Bowden on Tue, Aug 26, 1997 at 11:41:44AM -0400
References:  <199708261433.HAA13625@hub.freebsd.org> <199708261537.LAA24177@gatekeeper.itribe.net>

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Jamie Bowden shared with us:
> On Tue, 26 Aug 1997, Jonathan M. Bresler wrote:
> 
> > 	i am surprised by this, a friend of mine here, recently had to 
> > 	learn C.  the course dictated the use of VC++.  he went thru
> > 	hell getting VC++ to do what he wanted.  i showed him how i 
> > 	would do it in xemacs/gcc (i am NOT xemacs skilled much less
> > 	a wizard).  he wanted to know why he had to use VC++!
> > 
> > 	one ancedote for what its worth.
> 
> Especially considering c++ is not c.

I don't see the problem. VC++ distinguishes between C and C++. If
you don't use C++, you get C-style linking. If you mix the two,
you have to place something like

    #if defined( __cplusplus )
    extern "C"
    {
    #endif

in your code - but that's really the standard way of doing things.

- Peter



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