+++ /dev/null
-.\" t
-.\" This man page is released under the FDL as part of libstdc++-v3.
-.TH Intro 3 "27 March 2002" "GNU libstdc++-v3" "Standard C++ Library"
-.SH NAME
-Intro \- Introduction to the GNU libstdc++-v3 man pages
-.SH DESCRIPTION
-This man page serves as a brief introduction to the GNU implementation of
-the Standard C++ Library. For a better introduction and more complete
-documentation, see the
-.B libstdc++-v3
-homepage listed at the end.
-.P
-All standard library entities are declared within
-.I namespace std
-and have manual entries beginning with "std_". For example, to see
-documentation of the template class
-.I std::vector
-one would use "man std_vector". Some entities do not have a separate man
-page; for those see the main listing in "man Namespace_Std".
-.P
-All the man pages are automatically generated by Doxygen. For more
-information on this tool, see the HTML counterpart to these man pages.
-.P
-Some man pages do not correspond to individual classes or functions. Rather
-they describe categories of the Standard Library. (For a more thorough
-introduction to the various categories, consult a text such as Josuttis'
-or Austern's.) These category pages are:
-.P
-.\" These are separated by ONE TAB. Nothing else. I don't like it either.
-.\" Keep them alphabatized.
-.TS
-lB l.
-Allocators Classes encapsulating memory allocation schemes.
-Arithmetic_functors Functors for basic math.
-Assoc_containers Key-based containers.
-Binder_functors Functors which "remember" an argument.
-Comparison_functors Functors wrapping built-in comparisons.
-Containers An introduction to container classes.
-Func_ptr_functors Functors for use with pointers to functions.
-Intro This page.
-Intro_functors An introduction to function objects, or functors.
-Iterator_types Programatically distinguishing iterators/pointers.
-Logical_functors Functors wrapping the Boolean operations.
-Member_ptr_functor Functors for use with pointers to members.
-Namespace_Std A listing of the contents of std::.
-Negation_functors Functors which negate their contents.
-SGIextensions A list of the extensions from the SGI STL subset.
-Sequences Linear containers.
-.TE
-.P
-The HTML documentation typically goes into much more depth.
-.SH FILES
-Lots!
-.SS Standard Headers
-These headers will be found automatically, unless you instruct the compiler
-otherwise.
-.TS
-lB lB lB lB.
-<algorithm> <csignal> <iomanip> <ostream>
-<bitset> <cstdarg> <ios> <queue>
-<cassert> <cstddef> <iosfwd> <set>
-<cctype> <cstdio> <iostream> <sstream>
-<cerrno> <cstdlib> <istream> <stack>
-<cfloat> <cstring> <iterator> <stdexcept>
-<ciso>646 <ctime> <limits> <streambuf>
-<climits> <cwchar> <list> <string>
-<clocale> <cwctype> <locale> <utility>
-<cmath> <deque> <map> <valarray>
-<complex> <fstream> <memory> <vector>
-<csetjmp> <functional> <numeric>
-.TE
-.SS Backwards-Compatibility Headers
-For GCC 3.0 these headers will be found automatically, unless you instruct
-the compiler otherwise. You should not depend on this, instead you should
-read FAQ 5.4 and use a
-.B backward/
-prefix.
-.TS
-lB lB lB lB.
-<algo.h> <hash_map.h> <map.h> <slist.h>
-<algobase.h> <hash_set.h> <multimap.h> <stack.h>
-<alloc.h> <hashtable.h> <multiset.h> <stream.h>
-<bvector.h> <heap.h> <new.h> <streambuf.h>
-<complex.h> <iomanip.h> <ostream.h> <strstream>
-<defalloc.h> <iostream.h> <pair.h> <strstream.h>
-<deque.h> <istream.h> <queue.h> <tempbuf.h>
-<fstream.h> <iterator.h> <rope.h> <tree.h>
-<function.h> <list.h> <set.h> <vector.h>
-.TE
-.SS Extension Headers
-These headers will only be found automatically if you include the leading
-.B ext/
-in the name. Otherwise you need to read FAQ 5.4.
-.\" Easy way to generate these columns of headers is to use GNU ls(1):
-.\" ls -w 40 file1 file2... | sed 's=[a-z_][a-z_]*=<ext/&>=g'
-.TS
-lB.
-<ext/algorithm> <ext/hash_set> <ext/numeric> <ext/slist>
-<ext/functional> <ext/iterator> <ext/rb_tree>
-<ext/hash_map> <ext/memory> <ext/rope>
-.TE
-.SS Libraries
-.TP
-.I libstdc++.a
-The library implementation in static archive form. If you did not configure
-libstdc++-v3 to use shared libraries, this will always be used. Otherwise
-it will only be used if the user requests it.
-.TP
-.I libsupc++.a
-This library contains C++ language support routines. Usually you will never
-need to know about it, but it can be useful. See FAQ 2.5.
-.TP
-.I libstdc++.so[.N]
-The library implementation in shared object form. This will be used in
-preference to the static archive form by default. Currently N will either
-start with 3 or with 4, but your system vendor may change the name as they
-see fit. If N is in the 2.x series, then you are looking at the old
-libstdc++-v2 library, which we do not maintain.
-.TP
-.I libstdc++.la
-.TP
-.I libsupc++.la
-These are Libtool library files, and should only be used when working with
-that tool.
-.SH CONFORMING TO
-Almost conforming to
-.BI "International Standard ISO/IEC 14882:1998(E), " "Programming Languages --- C++"
-(aka the C++ standard), in addition to corrections proposed by the Library
-Working Group,
-.SM JTC1/SC22/WG21.
-.SH SEE ALSO
-.UR
-http://gcc.gnu.org/libstdc++/
-.UE
-for the Frequently Asked Questions, online documentation, and much, much more!
-.\" vim:ts=8:noet: