Re: Which version of C++

From: <john.aynsley@doulos.com>
Date: Sun Jan 16 2011 - 02:15:35 PST

Philipp, Bart,

That is the version currently cited in IEEE 1666-2005  (well, apart from the (E) on the end).

So I don't see that there is any issue, or is Bart saying we should NOT cite a specific issue?

John A

-----"Philipp A. Hartmann" <philipp.hartmann@offis.de> wrote: -----
To: john.aynsley@doulos.com
From: "Philipp A. Hartmann" <philipp.hartmann@offis.de>
Date: 01/15/2011 09:25PM
Cc: systemc-p1666-technical@eda.org, Bart Vanthournout <Bart.Vanthournout@synopsys.com>
Subject: Re: Which version of C++

John,

IMHO, this is the correct document/version to refer to.
The full reference number is

  ISO/IEC 14882:2003(E)

according to my copy.

  It may be sufficient to refer to the '98 version of C++, I suppose.
But I don't see a benefit from it since all relevant implementations of
C++ support C++'03 well enough.

Greetings from Oldenburg,
  Philipp

On 11/01/11 14:36, john.aynsley@doulos.com wrote:
> All,
>
> Bart writes:
> 1.1: should we mention a version of C++ that we’re compatible with?
>
> [JA] Because of the need to be very specific when citing external
> documents, IEEE 1666-2005 cited the C++ programming language ISO/IEC
> 14882:2003.  Is this okay, or do we want to refer to some other version
> of C++?

-- 
Philipp A. Hartmann
Hardware/Software Design Methodology Group
OFFIS Institute for Information Technology
R&D Division Transportation · FuE-Bereich Verkehr
Escherweg 2 · 26121 Oldenburg · Germany · http://www.offis.de/
Phone/Fax: +49-441-9722-420/282 · PGP: 0x9161A5C0 · Skype: phi.har
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Received on Sun Jan 16 02:16:33 2011

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