How would i know if call to a function is resolved at compile-time or run-time from any class?
For example - In the following, From Derived class when show() is called, would it be resolved at runtime?
#include <iostream>
using std::ostream;
class Base
{
public:
virtual void show() ...
ah, I'm a beginner programmer... Don't intend to bother you. Do you have some site of VB6 Tutorial? Just want to know how to connect to database using Adodc. Please?
I think you're talking at cross-purposes: you're asking about V B 6, but he's commenting on V C 6. VC 6 is quite old, and (according to some) encourages bad coding habits, so you're better off with a newer version. VB6 is equally old -- but at least IMO, the newer versions are no improvement.
@aerohn Start with C#. As much as the old me wants to like Visual Basic for nostalgic reasons, there's really no purpose in it anymore. C# is more widely used, has more resources, etc.
Can do everything VB can. You could arguably use VB6, since it's different...but that's also very old and obsolete.
@RonaldLandheerCieslak Probably written by somebody who knew perfectly well that a blocking call just ended up with the BIOS doing the same spin loop...
oh, I'm pretty sure most of my old code is lost, too - but I still have a lot of those 5.25" floppies lying around. that just might have some code left on them
and I don't have a working drive either, so it's just gathering dust (until the children find them - then they'll be turned into toys and the code will be lost forever)
wow - I can't believe I'm reminiscing on decades-old BASIC code
hey guys, I am looking for some interesting field from computer science to make my final project, does anyone have suggestions? I read about bioinformatics, and it seems interesting, but maybe I will not be able to finish something...
I'm confused. Some friends in the south-east say there's this nasty storm, friends up here in the north-west say there's a nasty storm, and some friends south-west say there's a nasty storm. Is half of the country covered in a storm? I don't see anything on it... :x
Is there any sort of console based ldd-like tool for Windows? I need to check that a bunch of DLLs and executables are not linked to debug run time libraries.
Hah! I just noticed "Where trespassing Singletons are shot on sight."
Nice.
Heh, I like one of the comments to this video on youtube: ""I've.....seen things....you people wouldn't believe....."
Has anybody noticed that MSVS 2010 is sometimes for unknown reasons picking "CustomBuildStep" for item type for random foo.cpp file instead of the C/C++ source?
The following quote is from C++ Templates by Addison Wesley. Could someone please help me understand in plain English/layman's terms its gist?
Because string literals are objects with internal linkage (two string literals with the same value but in different modules are different objects), yo...
@Martin So you get up at midnight in the US to work with a team in India?? Wow, I thought time shift is a big problem when off-shoring, but they are compensating that by making their employees work at night... I hope they're paying you excellently for that?
I'm not sure if it's been asked before on the site, but it's definitely a FAQ elsewhere (overall). That said, my criteria for FAQ wasn't strictly frequently-asked but rather a place to go to for definitive answers to "important" C++ questions.
For example, the link you gave me would be a FAQ question, since it's a definitive answer to an important C++ issue.
@GMan It's just that I thought we'd add what is asked frequently, so we have questions to link dupes to. But I'm not feeling strong about it anymore either, so feel free to add those tags if you think that's the way you want to take the FAQ idea.
Uhm... let see if I can condense the rant: Damn them, they hace actually removed the users/recent page... oh, no, that is not your rant, that's mine! BTW, I won't rant about it, but I am trying to be less active in SO/chat.so... it was taking too much of my otherwise wasted time
Ah, and the users/recent being removed is my rant today! Darn!
@Martin: following the comments on the meaning of defining a friend function inside the class vs. outside, it not only documents, but it changes the behavior of lookup:
@DavidRodrÃguezdribeas yea well, I don't disagree that SO chat can be a time waster... but it's nice to sometimes waste time with people whom share the same interest as oneself
(I posted here, besides the comment, as well... I depended on users/recent to get notified of comments and it is no longer present. Until I get used to the "users -> responses" thingo, I am using this as backup
@Tony I am not bailing out of SO, just reducing the time spent.
I hate going to bed, and I hate getting up in the morning.... so there's always that dillemma
maybe you can advice me
I have a function that currently returns a bool, however internally it is based on a function that returns an Enum, which turns out has another value I need, now I don't wish to change my boolean interface, as I use it in while loops... how could I best adjust to take that third Enum value into account too?
bool OracleConnection::next(unsigned int numRows)
{
try {
res->next(numRows);
}
catch (oracle::occi::SQLException& e)
{
std::string msg = e.getMessage();
std::stringstream ss;
ss << "[OracleConnection::next]: Error occured while looping recordset: ";
ss << msg;
if (_logger)
_logger->logError(ss.str());
}
int status = res->status();
if (status == 0)
return false;
else if (status == 1)
return true;
}
status variable can be value 2 too
I use it all over my code as such while(connection.next()) and I want to keep it that way
@jalf I'm trying to wrap this following function (setDataBuffer) in my class, but one of it's args is the type of data (eg string) the buffer will contain, I'm just wondering how I should do that?
@Tony it's just a case of you asking for help with imagined solution, instead of help with problem. forget about imagined solution. ask SO question about problem.
I wanted to make a class that wrapped a lua state object, and allowed methods on it to be called like c++ methods... but I need to template out a prototype for each conceivable combination of parameters.
I have an OracleConnection class that uses the OCCI Oracle API to access the database. I now need to go fetch multiple rows of records from the database and this is done with the ResultSet::getDataBuffer(...) function of the API. This function takes a series of arguments, one of them being a bi...
you can have multiple ones with different names, sure, but then it becomes less general. The idea here is that no matter what type T is, you can ask for the oracle type it maps to with oracle_type_traits<T>::type. If the specializations start having different members, it's no longer as generic
@cyberrog the function isn't visible at the point where it's called. Either move the definition of paraTela up above main, or declare it at the top without defining it: void paraTela(ifstream& arquivoStream);
@Tony well, it's up to you what makes sense. The traits class is just able to provide type-specific information: "If T is a std::string, here are the members and typedefs you should use"
if the C++ type doesn't tell you everything you need to know, or if the logic diverges too much for different types, it won't do much to help you
@cyberrog In order to be able to call a function, that function needs to be declared before the call. (You can define it later.) See this for what's a declaration and what's a definition and what they are needed for.
@Tony: I'm with @jalf on this. If you want to automatically determine the enum from the type, there has to be an unambiguous mapping from one type to one enum. Multiple types could map to the same enum, but each type must map to only one enum.
If this won't work, you can always overload the function template with a plain function that takes an additional enum specifying what DB type this should map to.
just pass the type itself. Like getBufferData<std::string>, for example. Then internally, the function can get the Oracle type id from oracle_type_traits<std::string>::value
Then: The wrapper "knows" the type it is supposed to serve, so it can access oracle_type_traits<T>::type all by itself. Users shouldn't even need to know that traits template.
@Tony Template instances are types, and different template instances (having different actual template parameters) are different types. As any other types, they can be radically different from each other.
Besides, if you only declare, but don't define the primary template (the one the others are specializations of), then that makes your compiler spit nasty error messages into your face when you screw up and try to instantiate it with something you don't have a specialization for, because a primary that isn't defined can't be used by the compiler.
@nils me neither, but was reading manual and it started talking about that, so I had to know what it was talking about, looked up textures and then I got lost into the gory details.... pfff, perhaps wasn't such a good idea
@nils if you're wanting to show it in the host debugger you need to retrieve the string to host memory, else you need to use a CUDA debugger, as suggested here
I am currently writing a matrix multiplication on a GPU and would like to debug my code, but since I can not use printf inside a device function, is there something else I can do to see what is going on inside that function. This my current function:
__global__ void MatrixMulKernel(Matrix Ad, Ma...
lol, currently C++, but in the future there will be other languages too, and I have an interest in GPGPU programming and perhaps graphics programming if I can ever get my head around it
quick q for anyone who knows. I always thought that in the iostream library, openmode binary only affected formatted i/o functions (>> and <<), not unformatted ones(read, write). Am I wrong about that?