From help-octave-request at bevo dot che dot wisc dot edu Fri Jun 1 18:49:44 2001 Subject: Re: Standalone C++-programs using liboctave From: adler at freenet dot carleton dot ca To: help-octave at bevo dot che dot wisc dot edu cc: help-octave Date: Fri, 1 Jun 2001 19:54:38 -0400 (EDT) Take a look at http://www.octave.org/mailing-lists/help-octave/2000/1307 for a standalone recipe _______________________________________ Andy Adler, adler at ncf dot ca On Fri, 1 Jun 2001, Berk Geveci wrote: > > I have used the octave library that way before. The > difficulty is that octave depends on libraries > some of which are part of the build process and some > of which are not. I would take a look at the makefile > and search for the libraries the executable is linked against. > If you have trouble figuring it out from the makefile, just rebuild > octave and check the line which builds the executable. > > Berk > > Sven Marnach wrote: > > > > Hello! > > > > I wish to write a C++ program using the octave C++ classes. I tried > > statically linking simple test program with liboctave.a. The linker > > complained lots of unsolved references, though nm reported these > > symbols defined in liboctave.a. (I even recompiled liboctave.a) > > > > I'm using the potatoe i386 release of debian. (Compiler g++ 2.95.2, > > octave 2.0.16) > > > > Does anyone know a solution to this problem? Are there any examples > > of C++ programs using loboctave? (Or isn't that the way liboctave is > > meant to be used?) > > > > Thanks, > > Sven > > Heidelberg, Germany ------------------------------------------------------------- Octave is freely available under the terms of the GNU GPL. Octave's home on the web: http://www.octave.org How to fund new projects: http://www.octave.org/funding.html Subscription information: http://www.octave.org/archive.html -------------------------------------------------------------