One of the guys who made QtConcurrent was into it, and we talked about relicensing it so it would be more friendly and more likely to be picked up by Nokia
I actually dropped the ball on that, and need to get back to it. The license terms were fine by me, basically giving them commercial rights on it... I don't care if it increases the odds of them picking it up
QtConcurrent is an oddball thing already, I don't think something like-it-but-different would be making mad money
But if anyone on SO has feedback on either project, I'd be happy to hear your feedback.
You may not like the ideas in them. You might not like Qt. But I think both are commented pretty well for what they are.
It's interesting, I think, in looking at language perspectives that some features are missing from languages "for a reason"... the kind of people who "use that language" do not care about "that kind of thing"
I have a hell of a time dealing with the people in the Rebol community. They are spot-on IMO on certain issues, but clueless on others that makes the language look like only crackpots care about it.
Well, I talk in one article on my blog about how people need "terra firma" and that is one area where (for instance, even on SO) you find people advocating C over C++
I've heard it time and again, I have C-programming sysadmin friends who loathe C++, and it's been hard to absorb their complaints and turn them into something actionable.
But I think they are right, in that abstractions we do not understand are unacceptable...
Better to use simple things that function predictably than complex things which do not, over the long run.
Just in case anyone is interested. I thought it was interesting; it's at a beginner/introductory level, but it gave me a few ideas on how they can be used effectively.
@RogerPate First link is to his blog post from earlier this month; second link is to the video from today.
It's funny to go to bed with you guys chatting away here, and when I get up you're still doing this. I know you (probably) are in a different timezone, and did not talk all night, but it still feels funny. <yawn>
there is a stack and four characters are input in the order "abcd" .. what patters can be output using multiple pop() statements if d is the first one to go out. Thanks a lot @Roger
@AlexanderSuraphel A stack is just like a stack of books, you PUT one on top, you PUSH one off the top. First In Last Out - FILO (or Last in First Out LIFO, the same thing)
sorry, wrong their. You PUSH one on to the top of your stack, and POP the top one off
Uhm, guys, i've just installed VS2010 express... and it gave me this error while building: "fatal error C1083: Cannot open include file: 'afxwin.h': No such file or directory" are mfc include paths not set in vs2010 by default?
@HostileFork: re codeplace, how about an editor macro/map/whatever along the lines of map <F9> :r!date +\%Y-\%m-\%dT\%H:\%M:\%S\%z<CR> (vim) to insert unique IDs as you edit?
@CiscoIPPhone: it behaves as an rvalue; nullptr is an expression instead of an object
@CiscoIPPhone well if say that int* intptr = nullptr; ofc you can't take the value that intptr points to because it doesn't point to anything, not even 0. At last we can actaully make a pointer point to nothing, not just a space in memory that we use to mean nothing
you can think of it as a macro defined as (::std::nullptr_t()), but it's actually a keyword and doesn't require any header (as you need to get the nullptr_t definition)
because (::std::nullptr_t()) is an expression giving you an rvalue, you can't take its address
But what is it? If you have an account at SE, you can just go there and create a tagset? Is there anything more to this than creating a feed from it? (I don't hvae a SE account.)
it's a single feed that combines multiple tag feeds, so several related topics (e.g. some [c++0x] questions don't get tagged [c++] initially) and tags across several sites (so, prog.se, ...) are all listed, without duplicates (e.g. most [c++0x] are tagged [c++])
@Roger, if I login at SE, would I have to also log into any of the sites I visit from there? Because when I visit any site I hadn't been on yet, I'm not logged in, even though I am logged in at SE.
mhmm. can't login there, attempting to is telling me I'd need an HTML5 browser (I have FF3.6.11) and advices to login at SE first, doing this doesn't help, though
Well, I had to log into meta.stackexchange.com as well, and then it's telling me I'm an "unknown user". But the site is providing an Email address, so I'll try that first.
that is how SE handles the global account info, to automatically log you into other SE sites, etc.; I think it being disabled (or not supported? dunno, I don't use FF) would explain what you're seeing
@thecoshm read about the mechanism of casts. for the most part they are mere instructions for the compiler. they have no runtime cost, at all. well, except for dynamic_cast<>, which does add a check at runtime. the other casts just ask the compiler to treat an identifier differently, saying "i know what i'm doing; trust me here".
@Sara in fact, with std::string you have more order. It encapsulates a char* inside and checks stuff for you when you're in debug mode. With char* you need to make these checks yourself, and it's even harder if you want to make things faster by disabling these checks in release mode.
@Sara do keep your friends. They're probably nice. But std::string is nice too. Usually.
Hi,
I have the following User.h that holds several attributes (strings). User.cpp has all the definitions.
//User.h
#ifndef USER_H
#define USER_H
#include<iostream>
#include <cstring>
using namespace std;
class User{
string username;
public:
User();
string ...
@Sara I think the issue is that you are mixing C++ code with a C mindset.
What you should really be doing there is use the << operator along with the C++ IO streams. This, as opposed to using the C standard IO along with the read() and write() functions.
In particular, use std::string for the strings. This class provides operator<<() and operator>>(). So, you can say std::string s and then io << s and io >> s where io is some C++ IO stream object.
This will do "the right thing". The philosophy here is that the std::string class knows better than you, a user, how to serialize a std::string object. So let it do it, with the << ans >> operators.
Taking the idea further, you, as the author of User, knows better than anyone else how to serialize a User object. So provide the << and >> operators for users of your class, as a service. "Users of your class" might well be you one week from now, when you have completely forgot how to properly serialize a user object. (Or, you think you remember but in practice you forgot a detail, causing a bug in your code).
from one problem to the next... I get my data crammed into a vertex buffer... now it refuse to draw... think its time for a brake and come back later to it
@Sara it's a good practice to wrap your code in a namespace.
IDEs give a good visualization of this issue, by showing how many symbols are visible with the auto-complete feature. You see how much of a mess there is in the global scope.
By wrapping your code in a namespace you group it under a scope name, saving some more mess in the global scope. It's just about being tidy. If you put your code in your own namespace then you can choose any name you want for a function, a class or a variable, so long as you haven't chose it before. If you don't put it in a namespace then you need to share names with others. It's like a skunk declaring his own territory, only without the bed smell.
Also, I suggest you take off that using namespace std from your header. This brings all the symbols in the std namespace into scope of all files that #include the header. It's a bad practice.
Only say using namespace std in implementation files, if you wish, but not in header files.
Granted, some will say even this is a bad idea. I personally think it's fine if you're aware of the fact you might have name clashes in that particular implementation file. But at least you know where that using statement is: it's in your implementation file, and it only causes clashes in that implementation file.
It's sort of a gun, (a plastic water gun, but a gun nonetheless), only you can only shoot (wet) your own feet and no one else's. Which in my opinion is perfectly fine.
@Sara bah yeah, do put your code in a namespace. Always. Then users say Sara::User rather than User. Granted, they can say using namespace Sara but at least they are very much aware of where the USer class is coming from, consciously. It's a Good Thing(tm).
Because the cstring header gives you C's string functions. You want the C++ std::basic_string<> class (of which std::string is a typedef), and this class is in the string header. Hence, #include<string>
Ah. Correct. Just declare the function, and move the definition to the implementation file, User.cpp
My bad.
That's because I defined the function in your header file. So, what happened is that each implementation file that `#include`d the header file defined the function (because that's what the header does: it defines the function there, as per my mistake). So what happens next is the linker comes in to link all the object files, *.o, and it sees that many object files define that same function.
@Sara so the solution to that linker error is to move the definition outside of the header and into the implementation file, so it is defined exactly once when the compiler compiles the implementation file.
well I just found: gamedev.stackexchange.com exists as of 8 days ago so I'm sure there are chat rooms there, thanks everyone.. hopefully they allow programming questions on there
@Sara make sure the definition of the constructor and the declaration match. In particular, in my code the constructor is already defined in the header, so you don't need to define it again in the implementation file.
That overload should be User(const std::string& name) : username { }
@Sara good stuff. but again make sure you don't have the ctor defined both in the header and in the implementation file, or else you get those ODR errors.
#include <iostream.h>
#include <fstream.h>
#include <iomanip.h>
#include "Person.h"
void main()
{
Person p;
Person q;
fstream file; //stream for input AND output
file.open("People.dat",ios::in|ios::out);
cout<<"Enetr details of 1 Person: \n";
p.readData();
file.write((char*)&p,sizeof(p));
file.seekg(0); //go to the start
cout<<"\nReading from the file: \n";
//here you can user while(file) if you dont know how big the file is
//Invoked on a differnt object just to prove it works :D
file.read((char*)&q,sizeof(q));
q.writeData();
file.close();
}
@wilhelmtell I like the introductory sentences in the article: "A binary file is a file of any length that holds bytes with values in the range 0 to 0xff. (0 to 255). These bytes have no other meaning." :-/
Every time I see another online C++ "tutorial" or "reference," I understand better why there is so much poorly written C++ code out there.
If you are just starting out with C++, consider getting one of the introductory books. The only one I can recommend is Accelerated C++ by Koenig and Moo; I haven't read any of the others listed there but they are probably good too.
From the table of contents, it looks as if the 7th ed. suffers from the same types of problems as the 3rd ed.: modern, correct C++ style isn't the focus of the book. (Since I don't have the book, it's hard to say, but the standard template library is covered in only two chapters that don't come up until the very end of the book and smart pointers aren't discussed at all except in the online "Boost and C++0x" chapter)
Given the starting point and the rate of improvement, the 100th edition is about the point to take another look and see whether it's had enough fixed to be worth looking at yet.
In the list of changes from the 6th ed., they say: "Eliminated “return 0;”. According to the C++ standard, any main function that does not contain “return 0;” as its last statement is assumed to return 0. For this reason, we’ve eliminated “return 0;” from all but the first program in the book."
If that's considered a big enough change to report it in the list of changes, I'm inclined to agree with @JerryCoffin's appraisal of the book.
I think It's much easier to pick publishers. Essentially all the best books on programming I have were published by either O'Reilly or Addison-Wesley (and I can't think of a really poor book published by either one).
@JamesMcNellis Right -- I wasn't trying for anything like an exhaustive list, just mentioning a couple that occurred to me right off. @wilhelmtel: I don't blame you -- but they tend to go together. Looking at C++, books by Stroustrup, Alexandrescu, Meyers, Abrahams, Sutter, Josuttis and Knuth are all published by Addison Wesley...
Okay, I'll admit that mentioning Knuth is kind of cheating -- none of his books is specific to C++, but they're (IMO) important anyway...
Knuth is kind of hard core for someone new to programming. But I do think that when a lot of people say they want to learn language X, they would benefit from foundational study of algorithms and questions of computability...
@Hostile but it is an overwhelming text for beginners. It's hardcore for experienced programmers too. It's a bible, in the sense that you need to read very, very slowly. Be extremely focused while reading. Seriously a hardcore exercise for the brain.
I have only flipped through Knuth's Art Of Computer Programming. Liked what I saw and I definitely like the premise, and how he has sort of made a "bootstrap" series of books that have code for their own publishing. His transcendental version numbering scheme is admirable for this idea of a parallel-universe where bug free programs actually exist...
A while ago Neil Butterworth, one of the most highly reputed people in the C++ tag (he has given so many good answers, that in the two months since he left, his defunct account has amassed >2000 rep from old answers), left here, obviously in frustration about Stackoverflow. I have since heard a f...