Well in the example I wrote I need to have int main()
{ #pragma omp parallel { cout << "Hello world from thread # " << omp_get_thread_num() << endl; } return 0; } instead of int main() { #pragma omp parallel { cout << "Hello world from thread # " << omp_get_thread_num() << endl; } return 0; } This is OK for this example, but for longer ones with couple of nested code blocks, its gets annoying since # starts at column 1 but the code blocks are potentially anywhere On Fri, May 4, 2012 at 1:16 PM, Nikos Chantziaras <rea...@gmail.com> wrote: > On 04/05/12 23:02, Atlant Schmidt wrote: > > Nikos, et al.: > > > >> Indenting preprocessor directives is perfectly acceptable by the > standard. > > > > Pre-ANSI C, when many of us learned to type, that wasn't > > the case; preprocessor directives had to start in column 1. > > But ANSI C has been around for a long time now... ;-) > > Since this is C++, we don't even need to care. You can't write Qt > programs with pre-ANSI C compilers to begin with :-) > > _______________________________________________ > Qt-creator mailing list > Qt-creator@qt-project.org > http://lists.qt-project.org/mailman/listinfo/qt-creator >
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