gcc --version
gcc is the most common C-compiler for GNU/Linux platform.
Platform-dependent (Windows, Linux, AIX, MacOs etx), but gcc seems to be a safe bet.
C++ source code cannot be run, it must be compiled and linked to produce an executable. Linux has many compilers available, with gcc being one of the most popular.
GCC is the GNU Compiler Collection (Originally GNU C Compiler) See the related link. It is a collection of "compiler software", that is used to convert human readable source code into binary programs the computer can actually understand and run. it supports several programming languages like C, C++, Java, FORTRAN, etc.
No generic answer for this question, specify your operating system and compiler.For example in unix: cc -g -o myprog myprog.cin linux: gcc -g -W -Wall -pedantic -o myprog myprog.c
gcc --version
Linux generally comes installed with the free gcc compiler. MacOSX does too. But when you compile a program with gcc, it runs on the platform under which it was compiled. Therefore, programmers on OSX that need to deliver a Linux binary need to use gcc's cross-compiler mode to produce Linux binaries.
No. There is no version of Sony Vegas for Linux.
Yes.
gcc is the most common C-compiler for GNU/Linux platform.
The GNU C Compiler (GCC).
GCC is already for the most part preinstalled in many, if not all, GNU/Linux distributions.
Slackware Linux has a number of advanced features. Some of them are GCC 4.1.2, XII 7.2.0, HAL, Linux 2.6.21.5, Xfce 4.4.1, The K Desktop Environment and Apache 2.2.4.
Hat aphase support the Linux version?
gcc is a c compiler among many other things. It can also be used to compile code in other languages. gcc is a fairly advanced compiler and is used to compile Linux along with most other free(as in free speech) software.
If it's already installed, try whereis gcc.
The current Linux kernel version is 3.9.