I figured it out =) Thank you so much for your patience, guys. It turns out I just needed to add [ glob FolderName/*.cpp ] in the jamfile to add all the source files to my target. Boy am I glad to have that over with!

On Tue, Mar 3, 2009 at 6:44 PM, Ryan Gallagher <ryan.gallagher@gmail.com> wrote:
Z. S. O. <tiredashell <at> gmail.com> writes:

>
> I'm not sure what that means. I've already #included the header files
> in the main cpp file, and it sounds like you're saying I need to list
> the cpp files i'm using somewhere...
>
> On 3/3/09, Steven Watanabe <watanabesj <at> gmail.com> wrote:
> > AMDG
> >
> > Z. S. O. wrote:
> >> Do you mean linking them in the jamfile? I'm not sure how to do that
> >> -- I think this is what's causing me problems.
> >
> > You need to list them as sources.
> >
> >> On Tue, Mar 3, 2009 at 5:00 PM, Steven Watanabe <watanabesj <at> gmail.com
> >> <mailto:watanabesj <at> gmail.com>> wrote:
> >>
> >>     AMDG
> >>
> >>
> >>     Z. S. O. wrote:
> >>
> >>         I have a source library I'd like to include in my Boost.Build
> >>         project. The library consists of an assortment of header and
> >>         cpp files in a folder next to the main cpp file and jamfile.
> >>         It doesn't require any elaborate precompilation, so it should
> >>         work just by #including the appropriate header files in the
> >>         main cpp file (i.e., #include "FolderName/FileName.h").
> >>
> >>         My question is, do I need to do anything other than that to
> >>         make this work? I'm getting an "undefined symbols" error, so
> >>         clearly Boost.Build not finding something correctly.
> >>
> >>
> >>     As long as you're linking all the cpp files that you need, it
> >>     should work.
> >>
> >
> > _______________________________________________
> > Boost-users mailing list
> > Boost-users <at> lists.boost.org
I think he's suggesting to just add the .cpp files as sources from
this library that you need to your BBv2 exe target just as you do
your main.cpp file.  e.g.

<BBv2>
exe my_exec : main.cpp ../library/a.cpp ../library/b.cpp ;

This is a very simple way to do it.  If you need everything in that
library then you might just use [ glob ], otherwise create a
variable to hold these files.  Better yet, just make a jamfile for
building a library binary.  I suggest you look at the following:

http://www.boost.org/doc/tools/build/doc/html/bbv2/tasks.html#bbv2.tasks.progra
ms

http://www.boost.org/doc/tools/build/doc/html/bbv2/tasks/libraries.html

http://www.boost.org/doc/tools/build/doc/html/bbv2/reference/rules.html

HTH,

-Ryan

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