@R.MartinhoFernandes I like a real paper book myself -- but when it comes to moving, electronic is definitely a lot easier. A sub-kilogram ebook reader can hold the equivalent of several large boxes of books...
@EtiennedeMartel It's 1800, no-one will call me now! OTOH, I'm expecting brain-death later - beer festival. I'm serving from 21:30 till 22:30. Anne will pick up what's left of me at midnight.
from now, in C ++, I've learned to class, inheritance, code reuse with the book <>, here's my confusing: from now, I can only write the code output with DOS window, I have no idea about the process of c++, I want to know what should I learn next, what's the difference between DOS program and w...
@LucDanton There must be a considerable gap in my education/experience - I have never seen it before <g>
@JerryCoffin Well, yeah. Why stop at throwing away the first result? It should have a parameter so that it can throw away results wherever you want to.
See C++/CX Part 0 of [n]: An Introduction for an introduction to this series and a table of contents with links to each article in the series. In this article, we'll take a look at static member functions and how they are supported by the Windows Runtime. A Windows Runtime reference type (also called a ref class in C++/CX, or a runtime class) can have static member functions. In C++/CX, the sy…
@MartinJames It's best, of course, to combine a comma operator with something that uses a comma as punctuation: f((a,b),c); (evaluates a, calls f with b and c as parameters).
I have two instances of devenv open. One has GUI open, other is compiling on command line, and I want to kill the command line one. One has 10-15% CPU, 55MB mem usage, 30 PF Delta, and the other has 0%CPU, 239MB mem usage, 0 PF Delta. Not sure which is the command line.
What about just 800 W without SLI, I know it's more than enough. But I like this particular PSU because of it's reviews/it's supposed to be very silent. I'll look into some HDD
I think people are better off buying a decent PC for $700 or some low budget (assuming they know how to make a good one) every couple of years without killing themselves financially over it.
@OstapHnatyuk Yes, but the time and effort to install "stuff" comes out to quite a bit too. At least for me (doing mostly hourly consulting) the cost of re-installing and such is probably more than the hardware. Building a machine I can use for 6 years instead of 2 saves money in the long run.
@Mysticial I suppose that's true, to at least some extent. I do it mostly because I simply want a machine I consider decent, and have yet to see HP, Dell, etc., sell one that qualified.
Sure, but the question really is do you use it to its full power at the time when it's still considered a top tier machine? IMO, haven't met anyone yet who does, but still I would build a state of the art machine whenever I'm building a new one simply because they outlive the cheap options being constantly upgraded overtime. Whenever I start overloading my machine, it's time for a new one.
If there is argv[1] I want to put some data to new ofstream(argv[1]) i.e file with name argv[1]. But if there are no such argument I want to use cout instead.
I've tried
std::ostream& output = argc >= 1 ? std::fstream(argv[0]) : std::cout;
But it even doesn't compile because of delete...