Table of Contents
The set of features available in the GNU C++ library is shaped by several GCC Command Options. Options that impact libstdc++ are enumerated and detailed in the table below.
      The standard library conforms to the dialect of C++ specified by the
      -std option passed to the compiler.
      By default, g++ is equivalent to
      g++ -std=gnu++14 since GCC 6, and
      g++ -std=gnu++98 for older releases.
    
Table 3.1. C++ Command Options
| Option Flags | Description | 
|---|---|
-std=c++98 or -std=c++03
       | Use the 1998 ISO C++ standard plus amendments. | 
-std=gnu++98 or -std=gnu++03
       | As directly above, with GNU extensions. | 
-std=c++11 | Use the 2011 ISO C++ standard. | 
-std=gnu++11 | As directly above, with GNU extensions. | 
-std=c++14 | Use the 2014 ISO C++ standard. | 
-std=gnu++14 | As directly above, with GNU extensions. | 
-fexceptions | See exception-free dialect | 
-frtti | As above, but RTTI-free dialect. | 
-pthread | For ISO C++11
        <thread>,
        <future>,
        <mutex>,
        or <condition_variable>.
       | 
-latomic | Linking to libatomic
        is required for some uses of ISO C++11
        <atomic>.
       | 
-lstdc++fs | Linking to libstdc++fs
        is required for use of the Filesystem library extensions in
        <experimental/filesystem>.
       | 
-fopenmp | For parallel mode. |