Can someone add "Also, please don't post large snippets of code directly on the chat, it's annoying. Use ideone and then share the link or something." to the "Code Sample" section here. I can't edit it because I'm not a mod. :(
I have to teach a tech college C++ course for students in an internet development program. The scope includes web and business apps. I've been told that C++ is hardly used anymore in that industry, but I have to teach C++ anyway. My predecessor taught C++/CLI to those students, but I was considering teaching native C++ instead. Would native C++ be more useful in those students' future careers? Or should I stick with C++/CLI. Note that the students will learn C#/.NET in a different course.
@EmileCormier For teaching C++.... There is no option. Doing C++/CLI is going to confuse the hell out of them. Do plain C++. Perhaps invent a game with graphics. Or a GUI based on gtkmm or Qt
@EmileCormier Honestly - for real life applicability, I'd say C++/CLI is more useful - but waaaaaaay too hard to teach in combination. As in: Don't go there. It won't work. You'll deliver non-programmers who have done a trick just once because a textbook/teacher helped them type in all the right words.
I'd really love for a college to teach [c++] + [python/C#] + bridging them. That would be superb value.
@ApprenticeHacker : Yes, I have no control over curriculum, and I'm bound to teach what's in the course outline. If I teach something other than C++, I can get legally into trouble.
I was thinking eventually getting them to program a simple simple client-server in C++, using boost::asio or similar to abstract away the socket programming hoopla.
@EmileCormier So? GUI's are fun and will keep them captivated. Command line seems out of date, and out of touch with today's technology. You'll lose their interest.
@EmileCormier I didn't doubt you knew. It's just the noise around this, because some other people insisted you meant command line programming... Sorry to disturb you :)
@EmileCormier Well, if you must go command line, then at least let them experiement with features of the language in the assignments. Don't be the ass: "You can only use what we've learned so far to do this project".
@EmileCormier Also, advise them to find a nice editor, like VS, or Qt Creator (for non windows). People who code in GEdit tend to hate programming, or write terrible shit code.
So, does anyone know where C++ might still be used in the web/business app industry? I'd like to make the course relevant to their future careers, somehow.
If you are a teacher and your students may not use techniques they have not been thought so far, you are an idiot and the only thing I wish you is death.
@EmileCormier Not really. I've used it for a large Win32 Asset Information Manager with Shell Europe (with SAPR/3 and Oracle). This would count as business/GUI. I've recently used it in a big enterprise Tax report application (client/server) used in accountancy firms. None of the two would legitimately be rewritten in C++ now. They would both be done in C#, likely.
Speaking of voting, the next year is elections, and I'm turning eighteen next year too! Wonder who I should vote for... Or, on second thought, it's a pain to go all the way back to my own country just to vote for someone.
Inline function use in C++ Inline function is another special feature or function of C++ programming (OOPS). This function helps program or application to speed up on the running time. Inline function is
@StackedCrooked To be absolutely blunt, his 'Modern C++ Design' didn't strike me as overblown TMP. Really, just basic traits/strategies/policies. A bit of TMP for typelists, but not much else. Or I wouldn't have been reading C++TTCG soon to make up for lack of mastery (basically, the SFINAE options)
@sehe I agree. But it was the first book that introduced most of the ideas. I also think David Vandevoorde's is much more comprehensive. But it was also published a year later.
Arrays are two types one is single dimension and second is multi dimension array. => Arrays do tarha ki hoti hain, aik single dimension aur doosri multi-dimension array. (exact same sentence structure as the one used in Hindi)
@Drise Hardly. From chat. But turns out daknok graduated from the same highschool where I went for 5 years (and I lived at 5 minutes walking distance for the first 17 years of my life)
Only, I left highschool in ~'95 and daknok just graduated in June (or May?)
I was thinking about how I keep saying that we should have added a std::value_ptr, and people keep telling me it's a stupid idea and that std::shared_ptr, std::unique_ptr, and std::weak_ptr cover almost all the needed use cases. It just recently dawned on me that we don't have shared_array, unique_array, or a weak_array, but we tell newbies to use a "value_array" for everything (vector). Simply an amusing counterexample.