I was just checking effective STL(book) example for set comparator to implement case insensitive set, but i am facing problems(visual studio says comaparator not valid but it worked in ideone). I am sure there is something wrong in my implementation even then it is little confusing what is right....
Setting a bit
Use the bitwise OR operator (|) to set a bit.
number |= 1 << x;
That will set bit x.
Clearing a bit
Use the bitwise AND operator (&) to clear a bit.
number &= ~(1 << x);
That will clear bit x. You must invert the bit string with the bitwise NOT operator (~), then AND it.
T...
I'm debugging code in VS2010, and I'm running into a weird memory access violation
I have a function call destroy_param(¶m), which frees memory. Before the call, param has a bunch of pointers pointing to 0x00000000, which the function will ignore. However, once it is called, one of param's members now points to a bad location
I'm asking because I really like Visual Studio on Windows. However it isn't available for Linux. There's only Visual Studio Code which I don't know really well. I'd like to use it as IDE :S
@nwp I've never been able to quite figure out why, but I've never been able to warm to Qt Creator. I've used it a few times, and it certainly works, but reasons of which I'm completely uncertain, I've always disliked it anyway.
I am using Digisol 3G Dongle(DG-BA3370). The software which came along with it has the feature to recieve and do outgoing call/sms. I want to develop a software which will automatically call the person when sms from any person(any number) is recived. Actually I want to broadcast a audio file to all the persons who sms me(which I will do by using output of speakers of my pc as input to reciever of pc through a alerady built software).
So can anyone tell the inbuilt functions in C++ which I can use to call a user using my dongle
@HNSingh Assuming it's a USB dongle, you can probably use a USB analyzer to examine what goes over the bus to/from the dongle during a transaction. Imitate that sufficiently accurately, and you're on your way.
@nwp I once used (and liked) Microsoft's old "Programmer's Work Bench", which was a text-mode IDE, and about as ugly as things get (but also quite functional--in some ways VS is still behind what it did decades ago).