.. Copyright David Abrahams 2006. Distributed under the Boost .. Software License, Version 1.0. (See accompanying .. file LICENSE_1_0.txt or copy at http://www.boost.org/LICENSE_1_0.txt) Link Your Program to a Boost Library ==================================== To demonstrate linking with a Boost binary library, we'll use the following simple program that extracts the subject lines from emails. It uses the Boost.Regex_ library, which has a separately-compiled binary component. :: #include #include #include int main() { std::string line; boost::regex pat( "^Subject: (Re: |Aw: )*(.*)" ); while (std::cin) { std::getline(std::cin, line); boost::smatch matches; if (boost::regex_match(line, matches, pat)) std::cout << matches[2] << std::endl; } } There are two main challenges associated with linking: 1. Tool configuration, e.g. choosing command-line options or IDE build settings. 2. Identifying the library binary, among all the build variants, whose compile configuration is compatible with the rest of your project.