it would be cool if Microsoft offered modern .NET versions of all the old languages, like Pascal.NET, CommonLisp.NET, Scheme.NET, Prolog.NET and perhaps also for completeness Fortran.NET and COBOL.NET heh
and of course, MIX.NET :-)
and perhaps Ada.NET and Eiffel.NET
and C.NET
and finally Java.NET
We already have "Python.NET" (namely IronPython) and I think some .NET version of Eiffel
I'm sure you could go on and on and on. It makes me kind of sad that so many new languages take the high road by targeting the CLI ... I'd rather be writing native code.
none, actually, cause the first few things in my trial dir, the first few things are files, and then some subdirs, so it sees the first file, and then exits
for each subdir in the current directory, you need to recurse into the subdir
So you basically need two "loops", one for traversing the "width" (each item in current dir), and one for depth (traverse the contents of an item). Or one loop and one recursive call, or two recursive calls
@TonyTheTiger Ah, I guess i didn't look back far enough before jumping in. Yes, if you're trying to get a feel for recursion, eliminating recursion wouldn't be very helpful.
but what I meant was that conceptually, you need to traverse along two axes, breadth and depth. So you either need some mechanism to traverse in each direction (which can be done using a loop or recursion in each case), or using Jerry's approach, you can turn that into a linear search space and then do it with a single loop (or, again, a single recursive call)
So, it runs once per iteration of the loop. And each iteration of the loop *iter is an entry in the "current" directory. So that std::copy line will print the contents of... the "current" directory for each iteration.
well if iter points to a file, it shouldn't get into the if (is_directory(entry)) statement, so it should only print "current" when the new dir is a subdir, no?
however that behaviour is not what I"m getting, cause it reprints the starting dir's contents over and over, with inbetween the subdir contents
hi i have a trivial ques when i create and initialize an array like this `int a[5]={1,2,3};` and then do `printf("%d",a[3]);` it always shows `0`. can u explain why?
"So, you're a C++ programmer? You've written a Windows app or two in your time? Let me propose a little challenge to you. Write one. Only start with File, New and don't let Visual Studio generate any code for you. Write each line of it. Then explain it. No MFC, No ATL. That's what was asked of me a while back, and the result is a six-paper series that has finally arrived on MSDN."
He he, no wonder new applications are so incredibly bad
I mean, writing a Windows app in C++ is trivial. I never let Visual Studio generate any code. It's very disconcerting to see that people exist who do let Visual Studio do that.
And judging from her blog entry it's not just a case of some people doing that, it's like it's the norm.
> Space is big. Really big. You just won't believe how vastly hugely mindboggingly big it is. I mean you may think it's a long way down the road to the chemist, but that's just peanuts to space.
for instance, for a question that is reasonably active - if you were able to somehow give a somewhat correct answer (but maybe has some incorrect information), a large number of upvotes, say 9, I guarantee you that people won't read it who visit that question and will blindly upvote it.
@RMartinhoFernandes oh, that wasn't sarcastic. The first line was a sad attempt at being funny, and then the second one was just too good to pass up. ;)