you know, I had a lot of plans for this weekend. We were to have a football match. Next I was to go over to my friend's house for some multiplayer games. Then head to the Lulu Mall. Maybe study some calculus etc. But now that the weekend has actually arrived, I wonder why suddenly I've fucked everything and am spending the day reading XKCD while eating potato chips.
But if you include your headers multiple times in your source files, which can happen indirectly in complex projects, the include guards are there to prevent multiple definition errors.
The standard headers already have include guards in them. That's why when you include them multiple times in the same source file (directly or indirectly), you don't get errors.
Try this out yourself. Do a #include <string> multiple times and see what happens.
@MohamedAhmedNabil Maybe, or maybe not -- but don't worry about it. Just use the include guards. There's not really a lower-limit on complexity before you use them. Under normal circumstances, it's better to just get in the habit of using them in all headers.
@MohamedAhmedNabil Depends. Sometimes I would write out the skeleton of the functions I think I might use then fill them in whatever order I feel would get the job done fast.
@MohamedAhmedNabil main is a function. If you have enough functions in a file that their order matters much, chances are good that's a problem in itself.
@Mysticial VS does special things with resources, such as map them to addresses in the low 64k address area, which are invalid for regular usage. And I think these addresses are used as handles to fetch the resources on demand somehow
@Prætorian Interesting... so how do self-extractors work? They can have hundreds of MBs or GBs of resource data? Do they get dumped into the end of the binary?
Resources are also handy for localization, you can store string tables, and MFC's CString and the ATL counterpart both support fetching these using resource identifiers
@Mysticial I don't know if self-extractors store the .exes as resources or just simply concatenate the binaries and making sure the PE header of the main .exe cause the OS to ignore them or something.
It might be the same way .net applications work. They look just like executables but have the CLR code as a payload instead of actual processor instructions.
Whether those have a "stub" executable portion that loads the .net runtime or the OS loader itself loads them I have no idea.
@Mysticial Most resources are only loaded when you ask them to be. You have LoadBitmap, LoadCursor, etc. to load the usual kinds of resources. You can also specify custom resource types, and store what you want to there, and load them with LoadResource. So, a self extracting executable will basically have the extractor as the "executable". That'll typically load the resource source, expand it, and execute it (either by loading it into memory and jumping to its entry, or as a separate process).
@JerryCoffin How are they usually prepared by the person who makes the self-extracting archives? Is there a "template" self-extractor that a self-extractor-factory uses then "puts in" the target exe?
Come to think of it, when you run a .exe, does Windows load the entire static section into memory from the start? If it does then there'd need to be a separate resource section that Windows knows not to load into memory.
@Mysticial I don't know if self-extractors store the .exes as resources or just simply concatenate the binaries and making sure the PE header of the main .exe cause the OS to ignore them or something.
@Mysticial It memory maps the entire base image, yes. Whether or not it gets paged into physical memory pages depends solely on use
@Insilico Neither. A .NET executable always depends on one particular DLL (Don't remember the name). A DLL can (and this does) have an entry point that gets called when the DLL loads or unloads (among other things). In this case, it starts up the VM, which finds the CLR code, and starts executing it.
@JerryCoffin Erm. But the term resource seems confused there. It doesn't actually need to be a 'legit' resource. It can be any proprietary format chosen by the packer. Agreed for the rest
@Insilico I'd say: exceptions. Not wholly the same semantics (in fact, usually waaaaaay better because of stack unwinding)
To be honest, I suggest reading up on setjmp/longjmp if you need it
@Insilico It sets a point of execution that longjmp can go back to. @sehe is right: the usual replacement will be a try, which will be returned to by a throw.
@Insilico Really? I almost can't believe it is mandatory. I think that may preclude it's use from programs that use setjmp for other purposes. Also, there might a more modern / c++ library for that...
> Suppose that you want to use an external library (e.g., libpng or libjpeg) that, in terms of error handling, only gives you a choice between an approach based on setjmp()/longjmp(), or aborting the program
@JerryCoffin Yeah, libpng is quite frankly pissing me off. It has no problems writing 10,000 megapixel PNGs though, so whatever replacement library I use needs to be able to deal with that.
Ok. I have never used setjmp so I wasn't sure whether that was possible. In fact, I had somehow remembered that setjmp was 'global' (like, errno). Hence:
@Insilico Nothing particular, but I guessed as much when you somehow implied that editing into a comma would make it somehow... unambiguous. People in general tend to forget not the whole world has the same locale conventions, but Americans appear to have this syndrom slightly amplified :)
@JerryCoffin Yeah, I was pondering a joke like that. However, I couldn't mentally work out that 0x2c (',') and 0x2e ('.') are in fact Grey-neighbours... (having a Hamming distance of 1). I think it does clarify precisely one bit (haven't checked)
@MohamedAhmedNabil Take a ruler, align to top of screen, read out, align to side, read out. Write the values down, scan paper, OCR, validate and convert to viewport coordinates. You'll need to know the DPI setting for the screen, though
@Insilico See, people complain about computers and programmers having incompatibilities, but we're really nearly the only people who come up with anything that's reasonably universal. Example: there are about 15 different standards for voltage, frequency and plug types for something as simple as powering a device. Power over Ethernet is basically the only thing that works the same everywhere.
@sehe A friend once told me a story about an old colleague who worked extensively with MS Excel and has a series of equidistant dot marked on his monitor with a sharpie, so he could align his columns perfectly
Following code doesn't throw exception and prints "success". Why ?
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
char* data = new char[1024*1024*1024*1024*1024*1024*1024*1024];
if (data == NULL)
std::cout << "fail" << std::endl;
else
std::cout << "succes...
@MohamedAhmedNabil It's actually a bit non-trivial. To see mouse positions (when it's not over your window) you'll need to set a mouse hook, and display the cursor pos every time the mouse moves.
posted on September 20, 2012 by Anders Schau Knatten
In which I introduce private inheritance, but discourage its use. When inheriting in C++, you normally see It’s almost as if public is synonymous to inherits from. But did you know there is also private inheritance, and why you (probably) don’t see it a lot? When inheriting publicly from a base class, all base members [...]
@JerryCoffin Hmmm. I don't think that highly of Spy++ :). But it is the prototypical type of tool that demonstrates what you described. There'll be API Hijack, but it's not trivial to use (and it is more associated with gray-hat scene AFAICT)
I have to say, even though my first reaction was a double-facepalm, this question gave me a good laugh. And the fact that it shows research effort means I will upvote it. The title itself is a fine example of click-bait. — Mysticial40 secs ago
For the record, compiling with $ g++ -Wall -Wextra -pedantic produces the following output: "q12507456.c++:5:42: warning: integer overflow in expression [-Woverflow]". — R. Martinho Fernandes26 secs ago
Yet another question that can be answered by the compiler itself.
I am having trouble compiling RC file. It was absolutely fine in VS 2005 but when I moved to VS 2012 troubles started.
That is what I have in RC file:
#include <windows.h"
#include AGPRODVERPATH
That is what I have in .props file:
<ResourceCompile>
<AdditionalOptions> -DAGPRODVERPATH...
@sehe It's not lack of steadiness. It's that the "button" moves (upward) when pressed (i.e., the "shadow" disappears), so if the cursor is right at the bottom border, it presses, which moves the button, which un-presses, which releases the button, which presses...
@LuchianGrigore Congratulations. Now you can attend the meetings of the super-secret Gold-C badge society. Unfortunately, it's so secret that even members aren't allowed to know where the meetings are held...
@LuchianGrigore Damn, I'm looking at your recent badges list and your Great Answer badge isn't on the recent 10... Did that matrix question really give you that many badges?
It seems like the simple of act of linking to your question gave you: Good Question Popular Question Notable Question Favorite Question performance Good Answer
@TonyTheLion It's like a pocket knife. There are old geezers who can pull out a knife and whittle almost anything imaginable out of a piece of wood -- but for most people, it's a quick route to a cut finger. Either way, however, the knife itself is almost trivially simple. Piece of steel, sharp on one side, handle on one end.
@Rapptz To read monetary values. Especially useful when you want the currency specified, but don't want to manually check against all the strings that can stand for various currencies.
@LuchianGrigore Yeah, it's kinda funny sometimes to see random people get caught in the crossfire of some of my answers. - Nah, I don't really drink anymore. Had a bad experience a few years back.
@R.MartinhoFernandes §15.2/2 (in C++03, same section, slightly different wording in C++11): "An object that is partially constructed or partially destroyed will have destructors executed for all of its fully constructed subobjects, that is, for subobjects for which the constructor has completed execution and the destructor has not yet begun execution."
@Mysticial: I've done about 2^80 facepalms since I've read your 1st comment and also had a good laugh. I guess, the fact that it's my 14th day as C++ developer can give me a bit of excuse, though. — Alexander Malakhov1 min ago
@R.MartinhoFernandes that's a simple question, once you know how much energy per face palm, and that is a more pressing question as far as I am concerned
@R.MartinhoFernandes Depends on the speed. To have done it already, infinite, because he'd have had to accelerate his arm to well above the speed of light.
@R.MartinhoFernandes at first I was shocked by such a foolish claim, but then I remembered just how many facepalms we are talking about here. Though, you also need to consider that the energy is not being used in one go