I've got a task to write a stack (without a struct), which uses a pointer for the stack top. However, I can't figure out where to start with writing the push implementation
@rshah Start with a piece of paper and draw what the pointer is supposed to point at and how it changes when you push something. Also go here to avoid getting yelled at.
Maybe try enabling CXX explicitly in project(... LANGUAGES ...)? It should be enabled by default, though.
Can you reproduce the behaviour with a minimal CMakeLists.txt paste.debian.net/909339 and a trivial hello.cpp with <iostream> dependency? (it does work for me without explicitly enabling CXX, though I don't use VS17)
MSDN blog I linked to above says to open the folder [which contains CMakeLists.txt] in Visual Studio (via File > Open > Folder… or devenv.exe <foldername>).
I just discovered that if I set the change the startup project from ALL_BUILD to foo and change the release mode it fixes it. I can change it back and it still works. Very weird
hi i have a question. suppose that there is a class Boy.
Boy b = c; will this call the copy constructor? I tried and it called it. Then if I donot define a copy constructor, then it also works. does compiler generate a new copy constructor?
if I do Boy b(c), then the default constructor will again be called right is it? And how can we see the default copy constructor? how does it look like?
so I get this: if we define a copy constructor, then Boy b = c; will call that, else it calls a implictly defined copy constructor, which is mysterious!
@samjoe You can use it. The idea is that if you have struct pair{int a, b;} you don't need to write hundreds of lines of code to make it behave the way everyone expects.
@samjoe There is not much left of the things you write after a compiler is done with it. It can be very hard to figure out which instructions originated from which part of the code.
@samjoe Have you considered reading a book instead? With your current learning style (asking when something comes up) you will miss important things and not learn about them.
This question attempts to collect the few pearls among the dozens of bad C++ books that are published every year.
Unlike many other programming languages, which are often picked up on the go from tutorials found on the Internet, few are able to quickly pick up C++ without studying a well-written...
nwp - i started reading a book called accelerated c++ but it started with advanced stuff like vector, string, so I stopped and went online for learning!
@rshah Not a shame at all. The whole point is that based on what you haven't showed us (the code) there's no way we can do any more than make uneducated guesses about what the problem might be.
I have a question. There is a class Socket { virtual size_t send(...); virtual size_t recv(...); }. I'd like to have a class TLSSocket which would use a Socket inside to override recv and send methods. That's easy: just inherit from Socket. The problem is, I would also like to be able to use a TLSSocket inside another TLSSocket as a base. How do I achieve that and keep the ability to use virtual functions? Create a class SendRecv { virtual send() = 0; virtual recv() = 0; }' and derive both ...Sockets from that?
@nwp, I don't see an obvious way to make it work (if I stuff a derived object in place of Socket when constructing TLSSocket, its copy constructor will steal the Socket part and leave the TLS part outside). @Mgetz, thanks, I'm looking into concepts
@aitap if you're responding to someone, please click the little arrow that shows up at the right side of the post when you hover first. It makes context a lot clearer
Hi guys. If I have an array which I declare in this way: int foo[300]; int p * = &foo[150]; I can access elements in foo by doing p[-150] all the way to p[149]. Say I want to do something similar for a multidimensional array, for example: int foo[300][300][3][3] and I want a pointer that points to foo[150][150][1][1] is there an easy way of doing this?