These are the sources used to generate drafts of the C++ standard. These sources should not be considered an ISO publication, nor should documents generated from them unless officially adopted by the C++ working group (ISO/IEC JTC1/SC22/WG21).
Get involved:
- How to submit an editorial issue
- How to tell if an issue is editorial
- How to submit a new issue/defect report for non-editorial issues
More information about the C++ standard can be found at isocpp.org.
Install the MacTeX distribution.
If you are on a slow network, you'll want to get the BasicTeX package instead, then run the following command to install the other packages that the draft requires:
sudo tlmgr install latexmk isodate substr relsize ulem fixme rsfs extract layouts enumitem
Install the following packages:
sudo apt-get install latexmk texlive-latex-recommended texlive-latex-extra texlive-fonts-recommended
Install the following packages:
dnf install latexmk texlive texlive-isodate texlive-relsize texlive-ulem texlive-fixme texlive-extract
Install the following packages:
latex-mk from the Arch User Repository. pacman -S texlive-latexextra
To typeset the draft document, from the source
directory:
- run
latexmk -pdf std
That's it! You should now have an std.pdf
containing the typeset draft.
If you can't use latexmk for some reason, you can use the Makefiles instead:
- run
make rebuild
- run
make reindex
If you can't use latexmk or make for some reason, you can run LaTeX manually instead:
- run
pdflatex std
until there are no more changed labels or changed tables - run
makeindex generalindex
- run
makeindex libraryindex
- run
makeindex grammarindex
- run
makeindex impldefindex
- run
pdflatex std
once more. - run
makeindex -s basic.gst -o xrefindex.gls xrefindex.glo
- run
makeindex -s basic.gst -o xrefdelta.gls xrefdelta.glo
- run
pdflatex std
twice more.
To regenerate figures from .dot files, run:
dot -o<pdfname> -Tpdf <dotfilename>
For example:
dot -ofigstreampos.pdf -Tpdf figstreampos.dot
A great deal of gratitude goes out to Pete Becker for his amazing work in the original conversion of the C++ standard drafts to LaTeX, and his subsequent maintenance of the standard drafts up to C++11. Thank you Pete.
Thanks to Walter Brown for suggesting the use of latexmk
.