Kari Argillander 708a5d8307 RFC: Remove Windows CE support (#4342) 2 years ago
..
Linux 6564238ad8 Add packaging directory. 8 years ago
Other 6564238ad8 Add packaging directory. 8 years ago
Unix 6564238ad8 Add packaging directory. 8 years ago
Windows 708a5d8307 RFC: Remove Windows CE support (#4342) 2 years ago
Boost License.rtf 6564238ad8 Add packaging directory. 8 years ago
Poco.png 340165e5fb scripts to build Poco modules as Nuget packages 5 years ago
README.md 0e6e16645c Remove trailing whitespace (#3668) 3 years ago
README.txt 0e6e16645c Remove trailing whitespace (#3668) 3 years ago

README.md

POCO C++ Distribution

This repository contains packaged Poco releases for various platforms and successive versions of Poco starting from release Poco-1.6.1.

CHANGELOG contains all changes for the following releases

  • Release 1.7.8p4 (2017-08-11)
  • Release 1.7.8p3 (2017-06-22)
  • Release 1.7.8p2 (2017-04-18)
  • Release 1.7.7 (2016-12-31)
  • Release 1.7.6 (2016-10-18)
  • Release 1.7.5 (2016-08-29)
  • Release 1.7.4 (2016-07-20)
  • Release 1.7.3 (2016-05-02)
  • Release 1.7.2 (2016-03-21)
  • Release 1.7.1 (2016-03-14)
  • Release 1.7.0 (2016-03-07)
  • Release 1.6.1 (2015-08-03)
  • Release 1.6.0 (2014-12-22)
  • Release 1.5.4 (2014-10-14)
  • Release 1.5.3 (2014-06-30)
  • Release 1.5.2 (2013-09-16)
  • Release 1.5.1 (2013-01-11)
  • Release 1.5.0 (2012-10-14)
  • Release 1.4.7p1 (2014-11-25)
  • Release 1.4.7 (2014-10-06)
  • Release 1.4.6p4 (2014-04-18)
  • Release 1.4.6p3 (2014-04-02)
  • Release 1.4.6p2 (2013-09-16)
  • Release 1.4.6p1 (2013-03-06)
  • Release 1.4.6 (2013-01-10)
  • Release 1.4.5 (2012-11-19)
  • Release 1.4.4 (2012-09-03)
  • Release 1.4.3p1 (2012-01-23)
  • Release 1.4.3 (2012-01-16)
  • Release 1.4.2p1 (2011-09-24)
  • Release 1.4.2 (2011-08-28)
  • Release 1.4.1p1 (2011-02-08)
  • Release 1.4.1 (2011-01-29)
  • Release 1.4.0 (2010-12-14)
  • Release 1.3.6p2 (2010-01-15)
  • Release 1.3.6p1 (2009-12-21)
  • Release 1.3.6 (2009-11-24)
  • Release 1.3.5 (2009-05-11)
  • Release 1.3.4 (2009-04-21)
  • Release 1.3.3p1 (2008-10-09)
  • Release 1.3.3 (2008-10-07)
  • Release 1.3.2 (2008-02-04)
  • Release 1.3.1 (2007-08-08)
  • Release 1.3.0 (2007-05-07)
  • Release 1.2.9 (2007-02-26)
  • Release 1.2.8 (2007-01-04)
  • Release 1.2.7 (2006-12-07)
  • Release 1.2.6 (2006-11-19)
  • Release 1.2.5 (2006-10-23)
  • Release 1.2.4 (2006-10-02)
  • Release 1.2.3 (2006-09-14)
  • Release 1.2.2 (2006-09-01)
  • Release 1.2.1 (2006-08-29)
  • Release 1.2.0 (2006-08-29)
  • Release 1.1.2 (2006-07-07)
  • Release 1.1.1 (2006-04-03)
  • Release 1.1.0 (2006-03-23)
  • Release 1.1b2 (2006-03-04)
  • Release 1.1b1 (2006-03-03)
  • Release 1.0.0 (2006-01-19)
  • Release 1.0b2 (2006-01-16)
  • Release 1.0b1 (2006-01-09)
  • Release 1.0a1 (2006-01-03) [internal]
  • Release 0.96.1 (2005-12-28)
  • Release 0.95.4 (2005-11-07)
  • Release 0.95.3 (2005-10-28) [internal]
  • Release 0.95.2 (2005-10-22) [internal]
  • Release 0.94.1 (2005-09-30) [internal]
  • Release 0.93.1 (2005-08-01)
  • Release 0.92.1 (2005-05-09)
  • Release 0.91.4 (2005-04-11)
  • Release 0.91.3 (2005-03-19)
  • Release 0.91.2 (2005-02-27)
  • Release 0.91.1 (2005-02-21)

POCO C++ Libraries

POrtable COmponents C++ Libraries are:

  • A collection of C++ class libraries, conceptually similar to the Java Class Library, the .NET Framework or Apple’s Cocoa.
  • Focused on solutions to frequently-encountered practical problems.
  • Focused on ‘internet-age’ network-centric applications.
  • Written in efficient, modern, 100% ANSI/ISO Standard C++.
  • Based on and complementing the C++ Standard Library/STL.
  • Highly portable and available on many different platforms.
  • Open Source, licensed under the Boost Software License.

To start using POCO, see the Guided Tour and Getting Started documents.


POCO has an active user and contributing community, please visit our web site, forum and blog. Answers to POCO-related questions can also be found on Stack Overflow.


In regards to Boost, in spite of some functional overlapping, POCO is best thought of as a Boost complement (rather than replacement). Side-by-side use of Boost and POCO is a very common occurrence.