room topic changed to Lounge<C++>: This is the C++ Lounge. Our Almighty God is Pedantry. It will lead us to Flawless Code. We worship Pedantry mercilessly. [c++] [c++11] [c++-faq]
Well, To be clear, i am an owner of iPhone/iPad room, but i have a clarification about inheritance , Actually people say that multiple inheritance is not supported in Obj- C, My first expression was wow and my 2nd expression was ewww
So, i came here to talk about it with some OOPS and C++ guru's
I have 2 classes one includes methodA and the other include methodB. So in a new class I need to override the methods methodA and methodB. So how do I achieve multiple inheritance in objective C? I am little bit confused with the syntax.
Thank you
@sreecharan What? How is that constructive. C# and Java don't have multiple inheritance. COM+, Corba have interface composition as well. What's the problem?
@sreecharan Protocols, as in this class implements the following protocols. Sounds like interfaces (not sure if more like Java interfaces or Go interfaces).
@StackedCrooked "It was created in Brazil mainly by descendants of African slaves with Brazilian native influences," says Wikipedia. And: [Citation needed].
@JerryCoffin I was contemplating of uncorking that bottle of decent red I have, but then I looked into the fridge, and everything kinda fell apart. Unfortunately, the Cachaca is gone now, too.
> Unfortunately, this video is not available in Germany because it may contain music for which GEMA has not granted the respective music rights. Sorry about that.
The parentheses are not doing anything in the first example.
In the second they are needed, as the meaning of the expression changes if they are omitted. Member selection via the -> operator has higher precedence than the type cast. So, if you were to write
(classA*)ptr->callfunctionfro...
@sreecharan ?! you don't think that song ruined my night, because you are listening to something else that you like? Yeah. Now I get why you can't believe Objective-C doesn't support multiple inheritance...
@user1400869: I recommend using just wchar_t. Among other advantages it's less of an eyesore in the code. But it is technically possible to define a platform-dependent encoding value type, which would be mapped to wchar_t in Windows. Using such a type would in my opinion more in the spirit of C++ (consider other platform-dependent types such as int). But it is a heck of a lot of work to establish the necessary infrastructure. So, wchar_t. :-) — Cheers and hth. - Alf4 mins ago
@Cheersandhth.-Alf Sylvia was another discussion fread. You and me are now talking Dire Straits. This @sehe guy says he heard about them, but doesn't know this song.