That's one aspect of Qt that I don't like so much. If you do something wrong you can spend a long time figuring out why. I think many of such errors could/should be reported at compile time.
> Apple announced it no longer uses CarrierIQ in iOS5. I'm sure this means that they have their own surveillance software running, not that they're no longer conducting surveillance on their users. — Bruce Schneier
@CatPlusPlus Me.
In fact, the only UI framework I ever worked with was VCL, and that is 15 years ago.
@LexiR According to Carrier IQ they didn't do anything anywhere. Or at least not something bad. Or their software did, but it never reported back. Well, usually, that is...
I freely admit I lost track of their current confession level.
@CatPlusPlus Yes, but it still proves his point. Had the function been unsigned char* Expand(unsigned char*, size_t) you wouldn't have needed to pay attention.
@ManofOneWay depends on how the compiler implements it, of course. But assuming (and this is likely if the function doesn't get inlined), that a is passed as a pointer, then yes, it's just a load (or move) instruction, where a is the address you want to read from
in theory, references don't have to be passed as pointers. So in theory, the way to get the referenced value might be practically anything
you're asking a real-world question, assuming that compilers actually implement it in a certain way. So test it on a compiler which implements it that way :)
I usually use a boost::scoped_ptr for pimpl's (for one reason because then I don't get surprises if I forget to deal with the copy constructor)
With templates however I can't just put the destructor in the cpp file where the impl is fully defined in order to fulfill the requirements of scoped_p...
Your operators should return Mystring& not just Mystring. That enables chaining like this.
Try testing simpler things first:
s2 = s3 + ",";
s2 = "," + s3;
s3 = s1 + s2;
before moving on to chaining:
s2 = s3 + "," + s1;
that way you can tell what the issue is more clearly.
@CatPlusPlus I'd say they're definitely not good introductory C++ problems. Perhaps once you get to the details of resource management it might be a useful exercise, but I'd classify that as "advanced".
@KerrekSB Actually creating a string class is a pretty good exercise in operator overloading. A string class can have =, +=, +, and [], which covers a lot of ground. IME, however, it is best to reduce the problem to operator overloading and let the students store their data in a vector. Implementing manual memory management would be another exercise, later.
I have found that it is pretty hard to find good exercises for operator overloading. It's a much over-hyped feature of C++, which (maybe except for =) you should rarely ever use.
@CatPlusPlus Yeah, but +, ` -, /, and *` are all the same, and so are <, <=, =>, >, ==, and !=. Actually, that's just two kinds of operators, and syntactically they are the very similar, too. And all of them a string class has, too, plus it has [], which is quite different.
Really, that makes arithmetic operators (you forgot += etc., BTW) and the pretty similar comparison operators, plus assignment and streaming (both of which you can practice with just about any class). A string class throws in [], which are very different, and quite tricky, because you need to overload them.
The following code compiles fine on majority of compilers (include Microsoft Visual Studio's - cl, Minimalist GNU for Windows - MinGW) but fails on Digital Mars Compiler - dmc with the error: Error: type qualifiers and static can only appear in outermost array of function parameter
const int MAX...
@LucDanton I'm very fine with topics other than C++, and I have no problems at all with the Haskell fetish so many here have, but you've been at this for almost half an hour at a high volume, essentially spamming the room.
Is the class predeclaration required by C++? This question is essentially the same as 'class keyword in declaration', so I guess I'm asking about why I get the particular errors I do in this example. Two files, one foo.h:
class foo { int anInt };
and a second file (bar.h):
#include foo.h
// ...
I want to write a library using c++0x cyntax and use it in another projects.
As you know, public value struct could not have any methods or operators, so we must do it in such a ways like writing static methods in another class to do this for us.
Also we can't write code like this :
private:
...
@KerrekSB You, because you seem to be very proficient, and willing to help. The problem is I'm teaching C at the university. I haven't had a lot of experience with procedural programming. As soon as I start to program in C I'm thinking in the OOP way. My students also, since they've learned Java before. That's why I cannot motivate neither myself nor they to use C.. since I would be inventing C++ from scratch.
@Beginner But I know very little about idiomatic C. There's plenty of use for OO design, and you can do that in C, but I couldn't possibly give a meaningful answer. I think Linus said that it's a good pattern for writing filesystems. But I really have no idea.
I'm sure someone else here can give you much better insights. Just post a link to your question.
@Beginner Learning to do procedural programming in a portable assembler (and thereby expanding your horizon) seems to be the only reasons I can think of for teaching C today.
@Xeo Why? If someone wants to receive private messages, they can publish an email address for that. As we have just heard, this is a facility that will get used.
You pick C when
you need portable assembler (which is what C is, really) for whatever reason,
your platform doesn't provide C++ (a C compiler is much easier to implement),
you need to interact with other languages that can only interact with C (usually the lowest common denominator on any pl...
I want to write a library using C++/CX syntax and use it in other projects.
As you know, PODs could not have any methods or operators, so we had to do things like writing static methods in another class to provide behaviour.
Also we can't write code like this :
private:
int _D;
public:
...
@CatPlusPlus I think it comes from the fact that C++ is much more complex. That's why you can easily produce crap. With C not so much happens implicitly... But I'm just a beginner :)
I am currently stuck trying to get some vertex data drawing from VBOs I keep getting caught with the following exception:
Exception in thread "AWT-EventQueue-0" javax.media.opengl.GLException:
array vertex_buffer_object must be disabled to call this method
I will refrain from posting all ...
Usually the benefit to the answerer is inversely proportional to the level of understanding of the asker. Quick, poignant questions are useful for everyone. Tedious explanations of little things don't help anyone but the asker...
@Beginner I'm not sure trying to maintain the illusion of OOP under C is a good way of teaching the language. I would instead teach them how to write procedural code in a modular and reusable manner. If they need a reference point, illustrate the similarities to OOP concepts along the way.
I have the following code, and although the call to boost::filesystem::create_directory returns true, I see no directory created in my project folder.
What could be the reason for this?
boost::filesystem::path dir("newdir");
if (boost::filesystem::create_directory(dir))
std::cout <<...
@CatPlusPlus so currect me if i'm wrong, but the VAO stores what VBO it is to use and the mappings to the vertexdata, such as how the colour is stored etc
@CatPlusPlus can multiple VAO's share a VBO, so like one VBO can store a load of vertex data for small models, but the VAO's can be used to start reading data from different sections of the VBO