Sorry to post here but if any one knows how to help me with this, I need some serious help for a friend, I don't do classic ASP and a friend has a unsecure website with no input validation for mssql queries. I know no ASP but I would like to do something like in PHP where I access $_GET[] and $_POST[] arrays and go through each element and fix them. SOrry again to post here but as we speak someone is deleting users and data on the server and injecting XSS and XRF code
@DavidRodríguezdribeas Because they are chronically overused in situations where their use is not necessary.
At least 9/10 singletons that I see don't need to be singletons but are used because a "global" is desired, but for some reason a singleton is considered more legitimate than a global object or an object with a global accessor.
@DavidRodríguezdribeas I'd say because they have no redeeming qualities. You combine two almost always bad qualities into one pattern, and the result is a pattern that's so rarely useful that I can only consider it an antipattern
IF you want a global, make it a global. If you want to restrict something to a single instance, rethink your assumptions until you no longer want to do that. ;)
5
combining the two, into a structure that it's needlessly hard to make thread-safe, and makes testing near impossible, is just asking for trouble.
int func(struct x{int a;}y);
int main()
{
}
The above code gives following error in c++
error: types may not be defined in parameter types
while its run fine in c with warning,means in c type may be define in parameter list
thus the following code should give redefination error in c
int func...
i did not understand...when i am doing something like ,int func(struct x{int a;}y);
error say you can,t define the type
is that means in parameter type ,,,defination does not take place in c++?
but when i am doing something like, int func(int a,int a) then why its giving an error because here redefination does not take place(in c++)..according to previous error
the type definition would effectively be hidden from anything but the function itself, in C++
the two parameters with the same name would mean only of them can be referenced by name - the compiler would have no way of knowing which one you'd mean with a
so both cases are really cases where you wouldn't be able to use what you're declaring
but why the error...you can not define the type in parameter list (only in c++)..since its mean when ever i am doing int a..its equivalent to extern int a...and even the error in int func(int a,int a) is different in c and c++
C and C++ have different type systems: C++ is much stricter with its types
so defining a type that would basically be un-namable, in C++, wouldn't make sense
the type you're defining in the parameter list of your function would be un-namable
in C, in order to pass a parameter to a function, the parameter has to be of compatible type
not necessarily the same type
so in C - although it still doesn't make much sense to define a type in a parameter list, it makes a bit more sense for the compiler to allow it, because you would still be able to call the function
@CharlesBailey in C it does, but in C it would also do if it wouldn't be an op of void so this isn't really important. In C++0x it does sometimes, for volatile type qualified expressions. See open-std.org/jtc1/sc22/wg21/docs/cwg_active.html#1054
So volatile int i = 0; int main() { (void) i; } would read from i. But so would just do i; too. Both would not read from i in C++03.
A simple way to cause a read in C++03 is to just stick a + before the variable. :)