@sehe How do create a new project, how to import project, how to export project, how to run the unit tests, how to format code, how to rename identifiers, how to extract method, how to show type hierarchy...
@fredoverflow I guess I'm oversensitive. I feel it shrouds the topic of teaching Java. If it's about refactoring, unit testing etc. I'd hope the course would not be called "Java with Eclipse".
If it's some kind of holistic practicum (kudos!) then why call it "teaching Java with Eclipse", instead of "Hands-on development: Project X in two Sprints with Agile practices" or something that covers the intent
@Puppy A result gathered from a function parameter in c++ is a reference or a pointer or a similar construct. Given by the function interface. So we have no idea of determining if it is read/written or not. An out parameter is given by the function interface as: this is where I will place my result.
@fredoverflow Naming is important. We all know that it's far more important how we learn things than what we learn (see: bad C courses). If people think they have learned "Java" when in reality they learned software development practices, they might not take the experience with them along the way.
Worst case, they might mistakenly conclude that programming in a programming language is mostly about clicking around in a GUI (I've seen way too many people with such apparent subconcious conclusions)
@fredoverflow Note that is not /at all/ the thing I'm arguing for.
@CaptainGiraffe That does not make it not an out parameter. It merely means that you have to write that in your documentation instead of inline in the function declaration.
@Puppy In my humble opinion. To describe a parameter as an out parameter, the language type system has to support it. An alias is not an out parameter.
@CaptainGiraffe And of course I meant {argv+1, argv+argc}, sorry
@Columbo I can assure you SO is much better for that.
I do occasionally take away a little gem from the mailing list. But the vast majority comes from SO. W.r.t. Spirit it's mostly cv_and_he (formerly known as llonesmith)
@sehe I can assure you that it isn't, at least for C++. For the latter, std-discussion + SG mailing lists + DR discussions are excellent sources; SO just very occasionally.
(Well, std-discussion also only occasionally, to some extent)