As said in the comments, we cannot remote-debug your application for you. I've looked at the question you're referring to, and all you have as information is more or less "it works when compiled in compiler version X but produces an error when compiled with version Y". Well, since it's a large popular compiler, let's rule out that something's fundamentally broken in compiler version Y. Select
isn't broken. It's something specifically about your code interacting with that compiler. So asking a generic broad question about the compiler doesn't help, and we cannot find the problem for you without seeing all of your code. Which is obviously too broad for Stack Overflow.
So what you need to do is dig in. Do A/B testing with both compiler versions to see if that's indeed the issue. Is the problem really reproducible if the only thing you do is switch between compiler X and Y? If yes, you could start reading the changelog/release notes of the compiler to see if there are any backward-incompatibility notices which may apply to you. If not, if the compiler doesn't seem to make a difference, then you've disproven one factor and may in fact be looking at other factors, like code which has also changed between your two compiled versions. In that case you could go down a route like git bisect
to narrow down what exactly introduced the bug.
Of course, there are still many other things you could do, like adding a whole bunch of log statements to your code to narrow down what exactly fails where, hooking into the process with a debugger to execute everything step by step, add some tracing tools to your code and so on and so forth.
If you have a detailed question with any of those steps or tools, those are questions we can answer here. We can help you successfully complete concrete steps which enable you to track down the bug, but we cannot find the bug for you. If you've eventually tracked it down to one specific piece of code with one specific compiler version which demonstrably raises an error and you just don't know how to fix that, we can also help with that then. But the way there you need to find first.