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Home/ Questions/Q 7738011
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 1, 20262026-06-01T08:09:07+00:00 2026-06-01T08:09:07+00:00

Why is it that some static libraries (lib*.a) can be linked in the same

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Why is it that some static libraries (lib*.a) can be linked in the same way that shared libraries (lib*.so) are linked (ld -l switch), but some can not?

I had always been taught that all libraries, static or not, can be linked with -l…, however I’ve run into one library so far (GLFW), which does nothing but spew “undefined reference” link errors if I attempt to link it this way.

According to the response on this question, the “proper” way to link static libraries is to include them directly, along with my own object files, rather than using -l. And, in the case of the GLFW library, this certainly solves the issue. But every other static library I’m using works just fine when linked with -l.

So:

  • What could cause this one library to not work when linked rather than included directly? If I knew the cause, maybe I could edit and recompile the library to fix the issue.
  • Is it true that you’re not supposed to link static libraries the same way you link shared libraries? (And if not, why not?)
  • Is the linker still able to eliminate unused library functions from the output executable when the library is directly included in this way?
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-01T08:09:08+00:00Added an answer on June 1, 2026 at 8:09 am

    Thanks for the replies! Turns out the problem was due to link order. Apparently, if you use a library which in turn has other library dependencies, those other dependencies must be listed after the library, not before as I had been doing. Learned something new!

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