http://www.flickr.com/photos/77897244@N06/6989774846/in/photostream
That's a picture of my code.
The "cout", "cin", and "i" all get the error "identifier is unidentified". I have no idea how to fix them. I have to have three funtions: Main, fill array, and print array. Help is appreciated.
@SamDeHaan As funny as your answer indeed is, you're only encouraging him to come back with another picture of his code for his next question.
I consider it wrong to answer such "questions". They guy should have had to change his question to include real code, rather than a picture — and then the question could have been answered.
The article you cited is clueless.
The advice against using fseek is predicated on the idea that even for a binary file (opened with fopen(..., "..b") the call fseek(f, SEEK_END, 0) is "undefined behavior". Strictly speaking this is true because the standard says:
A binary stream need no me...
The answer is now eligible to be deleted by us. I voted for deletion.
Considering his comment...
Look, you invite all your teenage friends to downvote this; I'm not deleting this perfectly good, knowledgeable answer based on 23 years of C experience, N-re-readings of the 1990 standard (lost appetite when C99 hit) and numerous technical documents in this area. — Kaz11 hours ago
Hi Guys, I posted a question "http://stackoverflow.com/questions/10383784/pointer-arithmatic" two days back. The question is deleted. Can you please help me understand, which of my comment would have provoked it for deletion.
> First: Asking "what's the output" seems useless since you can answer it yourself. Second: You answered your question yourself anyway, so what was the point of asking?
@CppLearner It doesn't really make sense to ask such a question. You can just save it as foo.c, compile it, run it and see for yourself what the output is.
> This site isn't specifically designed to be a database of placement questions or gate questions. If you encounter a problem then feel free to ask. People here are awesome. This is an irrelevant question as Jack has mentioned you could get the answer using any C compiler. Your ability to solve this question proves nothing at all. — nikhil
On a somewhat related note, an ad on UD reminded me that some online "funny t-shirt" stores really like to hire busty models. They really know how to target the male nerd audience.
As much as I like Windows, I really hate that when a new window opens it automatically gets focus. I'm typing stuff over there. Stop taking focus away.
A C text parsing question: if I have some input "(a, b, c), (d, e, f)", how can I extract the values a-f the easiest and ignore all the junk characters around them?
@sbi This server software I'm debugging installs each of it's bazzilions of components with it's own cmd window, stealing focus every half second :/ Makes typing hard and frustrating/impossible during install/uninstall.
@Jinu: FWIW, I actually made the effort to hunt down the other such spam you posted across the chat that wasn't deleted yet, and flagged the mods on every one I found. If I was you, I'd stop it right there.
@MooingDuck I run components that are pure command line tools (in test mode, when not installed and started as services), and those will actually wait for a keystroke to quit. Hilarity ensues...
@classdaknok_t The was a Tomalak on the site for a while who corrected everyone's semicolons and corrected our misuse of the term "STL". He gave up and left a while back.
Overview
Why do we need it?
Any class that manages a resource (a wrapper, like a smart pointer) needs to implement The Big Three. While the goals and implementation of the copy-constructor and destructor are straightforward, the copy-assignment operator is arguably the most nuanced and difficul...
@FredOverflow I'm not sure. But they had Convincing and manipulating for Dummies, which could come in handy when commenting to those Stack Overflow users when they are sure they got it right but didn't!
> Importantly, everyone who buys a paper copy of the book may also download a free e-book version. As I've written before, it is to be hoped that other publishers will follow Manning's example.
I read this review on Amazon, and I feel the same way.
No, but I do have C++ Coding Standards: 101 Rules, Guidelines, and Best Practices, C++11 Standard, Exceptional C++, The C++ Programming Language, Accelerated C++, Compilers: Principles, Techniques, and Tools and Data Structures and Algorithms.
Though the last two aren't specific to C++ but I like them.
@RMartinhoFernandes Yes. bittersweet. It's handy, but ranges (e.g., [A-Z]) aren't entirely -- a '-' anywhere but the beginning or end (where it's taken literally) has implementation defined behavior, so [a-z] could be either a through z, or the three characters 'a', '-' and 'z' (though I can't imagine anybody would actually want the latter).
@RMartinhoFernandes sigh No... I wnat to use a more complex format. It didn't work, so I figured I should try on the simplest example possible, which still failed.
@FredOverflow Yes -- with scanf, you specify a size one smaller than the buffer size (i.e., the maximum amount of input to read, rather than the actual buffer size).
@FredOverflow In all honesty, it does have some good points. printf and scanf make some things easy that are nightmare using iostreams, for one obvious comparison.
I am making a program which will essentially prevent someone from playing 3D games, and I am thinking of my options:
Downclocking the graphics card
Enumerating processes and determining if one of them is a game (how?)
Disabling the graphics card so the person is forced to use integrated graphi...
@FredOverflow Bottom line: while it certainly has defects, for some kinds of things, there's still nothing better -- and (unfortunately) some of those areas where it's the best available are the most defective parts!
For example I have this:
BLTab::BLTab(BLTableModel *TM, QWidget *parent) :
QWidget(parent), m_model(TM)
{
m_tableView = new SortableTableView;
m_layout = new QHBoxLayout(this);
m_tableView->setModel(m_model);
m_layout->addWidget(m_tableView);
m_tableView->setSort...
@stdOrgnlDave First off: it could be the correct behaviour. In fact, the question whether threads will be used can be entirely runtime, and a program might be able to run on a platform without threads support, provided that it isn't using threads. This is something that needn't be known at compile time
@stdOrgnlDave Secondly, the error is not nearly as retarded if you printed something else than .code() (like: .what() which would return 'Operation not permitted')
@Neal I think the title lacks 'Singleton' and 'Factory' pattern references. Is Qt in java these days?
I am trying to read in a certain portion of a file and that amount of data is different per line but I know how how many bytes of info I want. Like this:
5bytes.byte1byte2byte3byte4byte5CKSum //where # of bytes varies for each line (and there is no period only there for readability)
Actual...
dunno really. He has a kind of understated dry humour which I like, but not laugh-out-loud funny. Plus he was seriously jetlagged, so probably not at his best ;)