Good depends on what you need...
Boost is a very popular library that has many useful features like Regex and so forth. There are Windows OS specific libraries as well such as windows.h and winnt.h among others. It all depends on what you want to do. If you want to do math you might want to include cmath. If you want to work with sockets you would need winsock or sys/socket.h & netinet/in.h & netdb.h. It's all up to you...
goo bah tazzy!
With platform-dependent libraries.
This will depend upon whether the applications written in C or C++ have the correct runtime libraries on the target machine. The languages themselves make no difference.
That should be all you need :)
C++ is not platform-dependent. All you require is a compiler that supports the platform. Platform-specific compilers will generally include platform-specific headers and libraries.
It probably can with the appropriate libraries and phone emulator, but you'd be much better off using a more generic version of C++, or one that is more specific to the platform, such as Symbian C++.
Libraries in C are as follows: ctype.h math.h stdio.h stdlib.h string.h time.h
Xcode and Eclipse.
The header, io.h, is part of the standard C library and contains declarations for file handling and I/O functions. The file has no practical purpose in C++; it is only included because it was required prior to C++ standardisation. However, it can be used when writing C-style programs and libraries in C++.
A good open source IDE for C++ would be Code::Blocks or Notepad++.
Not without learning and practising.
James C. McIntosh has written: 'Public libraries in France' -- subject(s): Libraries