Hi Rasheed

            Please follow Thomas beside If you still want solution for
your environment. Set you library path and include path on your Editor.
This may be present in OPTION Menu.

 

Regards,

Oviaprasad D

 

________________________________

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf
Of Thomas Hruska
Sent: Thursday, July 02, 2009 6:45 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [c-prog] Guide me..........

 






rasheed abdul wrote:
> Dear friends,
> I have include stdio.h and conio.h header file with the syntax,
> #include<stdio.h>
> #include<conio.h>
> But, while complie, it shows error. The error message is "cannot open
stdio..h" and "cannot open conio.h". I checked whether I have that files
are not. But I have the files in C drive int the following address,
> C:\TC\INCLUDE
> Plz guide me to recover from this...

The old Borland Turbo C/C++ and the Visual Studio 6 compiler suites are 
incredibly old compilers that are outdated, non-ANSI C/C++ Standards 
compliant, no one in the industry uses them, and there are infinitely 
better alternatives out there - many are free - you just have to know 
where to look. Most members of c-prog will generally not answer 
questions involving such compilers and will simply tell you to upgrade 
to a much more modern compiler.

Finding a new compiler is quite easy. c-prog maintains a massive 'Links'

section on its website. One of those sections is entitled "Compilers 
(free)":

http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/c-prog/links/Compilers_000986587674/
<http://tech.groups.yahoo.com/group/c-prog/links/Compilers_000986587674/
> 

There are hundreds of free compilers to choose from. However, there are 
just a handful that are popular, well supported, ANSI Standard, and
free:

Microsoft Visual C++ 2008 Express
wxDev-C++
MinGW
gcc/g++

C++ compilers are usually backwards-compatible and will also compile C 
code. Of the compilers listed, Microsoft Visual C++ (including Express) 
currently has the best debugger on the planet - period. If you are 
learning C/C++, the ability to step through code line by line and see 
what is wrong is invaluable. Other compiler suites have debuggers but 
aren't nearly as good.

Should you choose to learn C++ using Microsoft Visual C++, the following

video tutorial on using the IDE is highly recommended material:

http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/beginner/bb964629.aspx
<http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/beginner/bb964629.aspx> 

There are two commercial (non-free) compilers worth mentioning as well. 
Compilers that are not free have to provide a LOT of added value to 
justify their cost.

Microsoft Visual Studio 2008 Professional - In general, if you plan on 
doing Microsoft Windows-specific GUI development (e.g. involving COM, 
ATL, MFC, Office, Vista, etc.), this is the development suite to have. 
Many developers enhance the environment with third-party tools such as 
Visual Assist X. Also, a number of popular open source projects (e.g. 
TortoiseSVN) will completely build only under the latest version of 
Visual Studio Professional. Be prepared to pay Microsoft prices though.

Comeau C++ - This is the most ANSI Standards compliant compiler in 
existence. Period. And it is available for virtually every modern 
platform. They have an online code compiler so you can see if code that 
doesn't compile under your compiler, but should, will compile under
theirs.

-- 
Thomas Hruska
CubicleSoft President
Ph: 517-803-4197

*NEW* MyTaskFocus 1.1
Get on task. Stay on task.

http://www.CubicleSoft.com/MyTaskFocus/
<http://www.CubicleSoft.com/MyTaskFocus/> 





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