I've recently decided to try working with SDL with CodeBlocks 10.05. I started with the tutorial on http://www.sdltutorials.com/sdl-tutorial-basics and did my best to follow it. Unfortunately, I'm encountering:
..\..\..\..\..\..\SDL\SDL-1.2.15\lib\libSDLmain.a(SDL_win32_main.o):SDL_win32_main.c|| undefined reference to `SDL_main'|
when I try to compile it.
I've searched through many of the questions on this website and other tutorials (mainly the tutorial on LazyFoo and the CodeBlocks wiki) and can't seem to find a solution.
- C:\SDL\SDL-1.2.15\include has been added in the Compiler tab (Search Directories)
- C:\SDL\SDL-1.2.15\lib has been added in the Linker tab
- The libraries libmingw32.a, libSDLmain.a, libSDL.dll.a are linked in that order
- libmingw32.a from the MinGW\lib folder in the CodeBlocks installation directory
- SDL.dll is in both the System32 folder and in the project folder
When attempting to follow the tutorial on the CodeBlocks wiki, I was told that SDL.h could not be found in the given directory (when making a new SDL project).
CApp.cpp
#include "CApp.h"
#include "SDL\SDL.h"
CApp::CApp(){
Surf_Display=NULL;
Running=true;
}
int CApp::OnExecute(){
if (OnInit()==false){
return -1;
}
SDL_Event Event;
while (Running){
while (SDL_PollEvent(&Event)){
OnEvent(&Event);
}
OnLoop();
OnRender();
}
OnCleanup();
return 0;
}
int main(int argc, char* argv[]){
CApp theApp;
return theApp.OnExecute();
}
CApp.h
#ifndef CAPP_H_INCLUDED
#define CAPP_H_INCLUDED
#include "SDL\SDL.h"
class CApp{
private:
bool Running;
SDL_Surface* Surf_Display;
public:
CApp();
int OnExecute();
public:
bool OnInit();
void OnEvent(SDL_Event* Event);
void OnLoop();
void OnRender();
void OnCleanup();
};
#endif // CAPP_H_INCLUDED
Try
#undef main
after all SDL related headers.Update. This is not a valid solution!
As pointed out by HolyBlackCat, this is a pretty sloppy fix. SDL replaces the main function in order to perform some initialization and/or cleanup that is otherwise not possible, and then calls back to the actual user function.
The interception works by replacing the name of user's main function to
SDL_main
, with a simple macroThe user's function then ceases to be the entry point for the application, and an entry point provided by SDL is used. The proposed
#undef
disables the interception recklessly and one should argue that it is not supposed to work at all. For those who successfully compiled and ran an SDL application after this "fix", it must have simply been a platform-dependent coincidence.The proper solution to the OP's error is making sure that the file containing
main
gets compiled and linked, and that the function has correct signature. As already posted by others.put these arguments to the main function. I had this problem too, and I fixed it few seconds ago.
int main(int argv, char** args) { }
The only plausible reason for your problem I can think of is that when you created the file with
main
in it, you forgot to add it to build targets.You should see CApp.cpp in the list where my main.cpp is. Right click on it and click Properties. Click on Build tab in the window that pops up. You should see this:
Click OK, hit Ctrl+F11 (Rebuild).
Good luck.