Reputation: 852
I have updated version of gcc, gcc --version produces the following output
gcc (Ubuntu 8.1.0-5ubuntu1~16.04) 8.1.0
Copyright (C) 2018 Free Software Foundation, Inc.
This is free software; see the source for copying conditions. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
i can include filesystem in header file without any error
#include<filesystem>
But when i try to access the namespace filesystem like below then i get the error
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
Error message
error: ‘filesystem’ is not a namespace-name
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
This seems to be weird since the gcc 8 has support for std::filesystem and it is not available in namespace, am i doing anything wrong in accessing std::filesystem?
and yes i built with -std=c++17
Upvotes: 18
Views: 20288
Reputation: 158
Because of the silly rep system, I can't make this a comment on slashmais's answer.
When using an IDE, make sure that you also set the compiler to be used to GCC8 or above.
In my case, despite being installed, CodeLite was using a lower version of GCC and causing headaches (re: not finding the header)!
Manually setting CodeLite to use gcc-8
(instead of just gcc
fixed this problem.
Upvotes: 8
Reputation: 7155
If you are using an IDE, eg codeblocks, then make sure the default compiler flags for gcc: -std=c++17 is set, not just the current project's, but the global flags.
Had this issue with CB and setting this flag under [Settings/Compiler] fixed it (no need for adding the lib)
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 117318
Add the filesystem library as an argument to your compiler that will be forwarded to the linker. Also make sure you are using C++17. Both g++ and clang++ accepts this particular format:
--std=c++17 -lstdc++fs
Upvotes: 27