Can someone answer me a really simple question? If i have a prototype that looks like this: void someFunc(const char *); could i call it with someFunc("jim") ?
The compilation of a C++ program involves several steps:
Preprocessing: the preprocessor takes a C++ source code file and deals with the #includes, #defines and other preprocessor directives. The output of this step is a "pure" C++ file without pre-processor directives;
Compilation: the compile...
The compilation of a C++ program involves several steps:
Preprocessing: the preprocessor takes a C++ source code file and deals with the #includes, #defines and other preprocessor directives. The output of this step is a "pure" C++ file without pre-processor directives;
Compilation: the compile...
@Graeme the compiler deals with headers, and outputs translation units, which are linked together (with each others, and with any external libraries you use
Ok.... But... the library is a standard android c library that is always included. You couldn't not include it if you tried (Thats obviously a lie, but you'd have a job not breaking everything at the same time)
Library is either a shared executable image (DLL, so or whatever your platform uses, if it even supports shared libraries), or a collection of precompiled object files.
Ok, I believe you that its a linking error. But there is no way android/log.h and its library has not been included in the space ndk-build is looking for.
Could it be because i haven't done an extern "C" ?
No they weren't setup the same, you were right. They were set up the same appart from what difference. The project which didn't work didn't have this line in the .mk file:
The funniest compiler errors are of the form could not convert X to X, where the first and second X are different types with the exact same name. Curse you, shadowing!
@FredOverflow I always liked Visual Studio's "error C4430: missing type specifier - int assumed. Note: C++ does not support default-int" because it's such a mess. It's a warning, issued as an error, and the text makes it sound like the compiler is able to recover
Testing algorithms is a dream: you don't have to set up any state. Just call the algorithm once with some input and compare the output to what you would expect.
All classes, no exception, shall have: a default constructor, a copy constructor, a constructor that takes all fields as arguments, even if it means taking 2456 arguments, a toString() method that prints all the fields of the class in the format "name: value", an equals() method (but forget that there is hashCode() and if you don't override both your class is essentially broken), and a deep clone() method.
@FredOverflow yeah, I agree with the purpose of TDD. There's a lot of value in writing your code towards a specific usage. I do that a lot, even if it's not precisely in the way prescribed by TDD gurus
TDD fanatics would say you have to use unit tests to do that. I don't really care what it is, it's just convenient to have some usage code ready to plug into
@jalf My BJam solution is starting to get arcane in some of the places, g++ barfs out when PCH is used, because some of the compilation options somehow end up being different.