This video is so wrong. It shows pictures of the actor named "Andrew Koenig" who died a while ago. Some of the pictures turn out to be the C++ Koenig. Oops.
@LucDanton - I asked that tuple into function pointer thing as a question in the end since I've still not got a nice solution: stackoverflow.com/questions/7858817/…
template<class Seq, class T, class R>
void apply(Seq& sq, R (T::*f)()) {
typename Seq::iterator it = sq.begin();
while(it != sq.end()) {
((*it)->*f)(); //shouldn't this be ((*it).*f)(); if Seq is vector and contains objects
it++;
}
}
@CatPlusPlus "ShellExecute(GetDesktopWindow(), "open", "c:\myTestFolder\myfile.exe", NULL, NULL, SW_SHOWNORMAL);" Was given as an example, but how are arguments passed?
> If the function succeeds, it returns a value greater than 32. If the function fails, it returns an error value that indicates the cause of the failure. The return value is cast as an HINSTANCE for backward compatibility with 16-bit Windows applications. It is not a true HINSTANCE, however. It can be cast only to an int and compared to either 32 or the following error codes below.
but note that this only tells you whether the ShellExecute call succeeded. It does not tell you whether the process you launched returned an error when it finished
I think you'll need to use CreateProcess or similar to get a handle to the launched process, and check its return code
yeah, it basically does the same thing as when you double-click on a file. It starts the program, but nothing else. It doesn't wait for the process to terminate
Now I'm looking at how to close the handle, waiting, deadlocking, calls that hang and event queues. Only the WinAPI could be this complex for something as simple as calling a .exe.
I just want to call a freakin' .exe! I don't want to have to call one billion processes that then eventually permit me to call an .exe that might just fail anyway!
@awoodland nearly every respect. My problem is that I need to emulate 64-bit integer operations, so a 128-bit register doesn't really help me that much :(
I did spend some time fiddling with converting my code to using SSE instead, but put that on the back burner a bit. Didn't really seem worth the trouble
by "make small classes" i mean small classes with destructors :-)
because then you can treat errors by throwing exceptions
makes the whole thing simpler
generally
note for ScopeGuard: if you use Visual C++'s modify-and-continue support, then you need to replace the original source's standard __LINE__ with Visual C++-specific __COUNTER__. i don't know why but Visual C++ fouls up the __LINE__ result when edit-and-continue option is present. Or it used to.
@AlfPSteinbach I think last time I saw edit-and-continue actually work was in VS2003. I was starting to assume its continued existence was an urban legend
there is one main reason to use ShellExecute instead of CreateProcess, and that is that the latter, in spite of originally being the lower level, doesn't handle modern User Account Checking well, it sort of barfs as I recall
@JohannesSchaublitb yeah, the ability to break in the debugger, modify some code, and then have the changes immediately compiled so you can continue debugging
in .net, you can actually change the line of code at the breakpoint, in the caller, the caller's caller, etc as well. it's pretty spiffy, really, but i can't say i've used it enough to matter
@AlfPSteinbach I like the idea. Whilst I don't use the particular method used there, I do something similar where dynamic and file classes are expected to delete/close their contents when they go out of scope.
yeah, well. VS being an integrated development environment, it'll do all that without you having to worry whether it's the debugger, compiler, or editor :)
I'm sorry if it hurt your feelings, but you asked what edit-and-continue is, and we answered. No one, except you, had any interest whatsoever in comparing it against GDB's capabilities
one of my friends sprinkles over his code statements of the form LOG("This should not happen!"); return NULL; LOG("Now shutting down!!"); // TODO: BUG IN THIS CODE!
oh how I hate that
why in the world does he log things to a file and continue the program and not assert(0); or something
I remember from a presentation of Hans Boehm ("C++ and Threads" or something) he said that initialization of local statics is thread safe in C++ but that it will not require a lock in implementations
I don't understand how that will work without locks
he said that a new algorithm was found to do threadsafe initialization without locks.
@jalf This is how all code in the future should be like.
@cpx To quote a comment: "this video should be title software engineer vs programmer. As essentially programmer and coder are the same thing.". And to quote myself earlier:
"...Only SO users can get worked up over semantics..."
My schedule for the next two weeks looks like this:
Mon teach C in the real world
Tue teach C in the real world
Wed teach C++ in the ivory tower
Thu teach C in the real world
Fri teach C in the real world
In paper http://www.open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/papers/2008/n2660.htm an algorithm is presented that does not need to hold a lock during the initialization of a local static variable but still causes concurrent flow of control through the variable definition to wait until initialization fini...