Hi all, I've been doing some test builds with g++-4.3 (on Debian, naturally), to see what sort of preparation will be needed before it's released as stable. One of the packages I was trying to build bombed with this error:
/usr/include/sigc++-2.0/sigc++/signal.h:1675: error: declaration of 'typedef struct sigc::slot_list<sigc::slot<T_return, sigc::nil, sigc::nil, sigc::nil, sigc::nil, sigc::nil, sigc::nil, sigc::nil> > sigc::signal0<T_return, T_accumulator>::slot_list' /usr/include/sigc++-2.0/sigc++/signal.h:168: error: changes meaning of 'slot_list' from 'struct sigc::slot_list<sigc::slot<T_return, sigc::nil, sigc::nil, sigc::nil, sigc::nil, sigc::nil, sigc::nil, sigc::nil> >' The typedef in question is protected by a #ifdef and a comment saying that it exists only for backwards compatibility. If I edit the include file in /usr/include that declares the corresponding #define and remove it, my compile succeeds. This also causes the build of the library itself to fail. Is it safe for me to just remove the problematic #define from the headers entirely? I'd like to have future-proof packages if possible. Thanks, Daniel _______________________________________________ libsigc-list mailing list libsigc-list@gnome.org http://mail.gnome.org/mailman/listinfo/libsigc-list