@CatPlusPlus I know you don't like Objective-C either, BUT I was an iPhone developer this summer and I must say it was great when using the Cocoa API and following the MVC-pattern. Really productive!
I favor a pull approach: the View updates itself periodically. The classic approach where the GUI updates after receiving a changed-notification from the GUI is a little error prone imo.
The controller receives the event from the view and updates the model accordingly. The controller receives change events from the model and updates the view accordingly. This makes me shiver.
I tried to implement a GUI library where you could bind the a component's value to a callback. e.g: label.setText(boost::bind(&Model::getUserName, model)); But it's error prone during program exit.
"Here's this piece of code that is not actually possible, but I don't know that because I don't know the language and I didn't even try it. How is this possible?"
@CatPlusPlus MVVM pattern doesn't use a typical MVC controller either, the controller (ViewModel) resembles a sort of alternate version of the model itself
I was wondering about the following:
Object sender = new Object();
Button BtnPushed = (Button)sender;
How come it's possible to cast from an object to for example a Button, but without having to create an object of the class Button first?
For example like this:
Object sender = new Object();...
Back in 2004 I had to rely on the C++ mailing list to get help. This meant waiting for 24 hours before getting an answer. So I still had time to think it over.
I had done a Java Tetris game around 2000 before I had internet. I got it to work but it was a horrible mess. I had numerous copies of my code called backup, backup2, etc.. (Didn't know about source control back then.)
@RMartinhoFernandes You were pretty bright then. I was very chaotic. Learning about good coding practices was a necessity for me in order to write even a small application.
@StackedCrooked I had a plan. I quickly learned whenever I copy-pasted some code and found out some bug later, I had to fix it in two places. So I added special comments like (* ACTION: move up *) so I could easily locate the places where I had to fix the same bug.
what i'm concerned about in that respect is mostly how one convinces a windows console window to use the colors for a popup. it does for F7. but that's all.
@RMartinhoFernandes Actually, there are two entirely separate things called overlays. One was video trickery, where you could tell the video card to display stuff from two disjoint parts of video memory at once. The other was a mediocre imitation of virtual memory that swapped pieces of code in/out of a fixed-size area so you could use a program too large to fit in physical memory.
@JerryCoffin i think it's worth noting that we have that manual swap-out still in Windows, via DllCanUnloadNow (or whatever the name is, COM function). risky stuff.
@AlfPSteinbach There are bits and pieces still present -- but you only rarely have to worry about them now. I can recall spending weeks working at optimizing which functions went into which overlay. Maybe it wasn't quite as bad as I remember, but it was pretty ugly anyway.
@RMartinhoFernandes Frank Herbert aside, it really was a job position at one time, and when I first heard about computers, that was still common enough that people still specifically disambiguated the two).
> On July 9, 2008, it was announced that Windows for Workgroups 3.11 for the embedded devices channel would no longer be made available for OEM distribution as of November 1, 2008
@TonyTheLion Pointers aren't a problem -- the compiler deals with that pretty cleanly as long as you really keep pointers straight from ints (and such). The part that's usually ugly is message cracking, but MFC handles that so I literally have some code that will compile cleanly for 16, 32, or 64 bit target without a single change.
@RMartinhoFernandes It's become fashionable to bash it, but MFC isn't really nearly as bad as a lot of people try to claim. In fact, it's pretty clear a lot of the bashers have never used it and really don't know what they're talking about.