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Home/ Questions/Q 1009581
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 16, 20262026-05-16T08:57:03+00:00 2026-05-16T08:57:03+00:00

After some time mainly .net development, i need to work in c++ in a

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After some time mainly .net development, i need to work in c++ in a cross platform manner.

I don’t want to give up visual studio, so my hope was that it is possible to use visual studio and the windows target as a testbuild, and then every once in a while through means of a vm test the code on linux or mac.

Does anyone have experience in how to best set this up?

I’m especially curious on how you make sure that things like the project file stay in sync with the make files which are probably needed on the *nix platforms.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-16T08:57:03+00:00Added an answer on May 16, 2026 at 8:57 am

    First of all, select a non-managed C++ project (to avoid the .net stuff).

    After that, turn up the warning level (/W3 should do), and be very careful what you do/write. IMHO, GCC is better at keeping you straight with the standard (-Wall -Wextra -pedantic -std=c++11), but you specify MSVC.

    As Noah said, you’ll need build system that is in itself cross-platform, like CMake (there are others, please don’t forget that).

    Remember to use platform/architecture/compiler independent types, like std::size_t, std::(u)intptr_t etc. instead of plain int, long, unsigned: these are a recipe for disaster and the Windows API throws these around way too much.

    See here, but only/especially points 1, 2, 5, and 8 (and 9, but generalize that to svn, git, mercurial).

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