I don't know much about D, but many, many C++ programmers I know greatly dislike it, and I personally have to agree- I don't like the look of D and will not be taking a closer one.
In order to understand why D isn't gaining more traction, you need to start by understanding what attracts people t...
@DeadMG Clearly he isn't. Or his contributions on GN2012 would have been about Andrei, not funtastic dotdotdots. Why would he bother with 'old fashioned C++', if it isn't what he thinks is best?
@DeadMG I'm sure you have a concrete case of the grudge there, but I'm leaving history alone, since we can talk without invoking external deities from the orbs.
We are plenty arrogant and we don't need the help, thank you very much!
:2573561 Yeah
Basic hello world example (in a debugger you can see this works)
#import "ComCallable.tlb" raw_interfaces_only
using namespace COMCallable;
int _tmain(int argc, _TCHAR* argv[])
{
CoInitialize(NULL);
ISamplePtr ptr = ISamplePtr(__uuidof(Sample));
BSTR* retval = new BSTR();
ptr->GetString(retval);
CoUninitialize();
return 0;
}
@DeadMG I can't tell you for language X. But any design choice (such as - I don't want to banhammer impure functions, or I don't want to banhammer explicit memory management) has impact on the rest of the lot.
@RMartinhoFernandes I believe that Standard containers assume that move constructors for their contained types do not throw. I further believe this decision was made because they found no way to be exception-safe otherwise.
@Mysticial Was just trying to figure out what intel c++ is compatible with? I'm getting the impression it might be compatible only with GCC in a 'intel' mode?
If this pertains to c++ please use c++ terminology.
Containment is a sci-fi term.
-"We need to construct the used object before, or destroy it after, another base subobject. If the slightly longer object lifetime matters, there's no way to get it other than using inheritance"
The author of tha...
In OOP supported languages, containership means an object is created within another object.
For Example in C++:
class A
{
int a;
}x;
class B
{
A y; // All the data members and member functions of class A can be accessed through the object 'y'
}z;
See also
* Object composition
difference between Container ship and Inheritance?
http://forums.devx.com/archive/index.php/t-86776.html
@TonyTheLion just ask it in the java room. UML has at least two dozen different types of aggregation relations, besides as many types of composition relations
@TonyTheLion I never 'believed' in the UML religion. I did do my 16 months of Java wankery though. I learned a lot. I was the worst type of Java 'engineer'.
@CaptainGiraffe one of my roomies got an admin account to some automobile forum. He posted the first 42 pages of "War and Peace" before they banned that account.
@Mysticial Was just trying to figure out what intel c++ is compatible with? I'm getting the impression it might be compatible only with GCC in a 'intel' mode?
@FredOverflow You know, I, too, love to do both, programming myself and teaching others to do that. Just hacking away at my own code isn't as satisfying as teaching can be, and only teaching would make me go nuts. But it's not just university where you can teach. I have taught apprentices (Fachinformatiker Anwendungsentwicklung), given seminars in the industry, and taught at two different FHs in Berlin — while having a 30hr/week contract writing interesting programs.