dota17 e9ccbe0145 Create an example directory and add some code examples. (#944)
* update example directory

* modify some compile error.

* update with clang-format

* update

* update

* add_definitions("../include/json")

# Please enter the commit message for your changes. Lines starting
# with '#' will be ignored, and an empty message aborts the commit.
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# Date:      Wed Jul 10 21:26:16 2019 +0800
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# On branch code_example
# Your branch is up-to-date with 'origin/code_example'.
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# Changes to be committed:
#	modified:   example/CMakeLists.txt
#

* change CMakeLists.txt

* update streamWrite.cpp

* update

* Update readFromStream.cpp

* fix typo
2019-09-17 13:30:00 -07:00
..

NOTE

If you get linker errors about undefined references to symbols that involve types in the std::__cxx11 namespace or the tag [abi:cxx11] then it probably indicates that you are trying to link together object files that were compiled with different values for the _GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI marco. This commonly happens when linking to a third-party library that was compiled with an older version of GCC. If the third-party library cannot be rebuilt with the new ABI, then you need to recompile your code with the old ABI,just like: g++ stringWrite.cpp -ljsoncpp -std=c++11 -D_GLIBCXX_USE_CXX11_ABI=0 -o stringWrite

Not all of uses of the new ABI will cause changes in symbol names, for example a class with a std::string member variable will have the same mangled name whether compiled with the older or new ABI. In order to detect such problems, the new types and functions are annotated with the abi_tag attribute, allowing the compiler to warn about potential ABI incompatibilities in code using them. Those warnings can be enabled with the -Wabi-tag option.