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06:03
Anyone know where I can find a clear, up-to-date explanation of how to use CMake? I know enough to get by, but I want to know the proper way of doing things. E.g. how do you handle dependencies?
Ideally, I'd want to see a mapping of how a project is laid out. Stuff like, "This is how to lay out the project if it's an application. This is how to lay out the project if it's a library. Here's how you have unit tests. Here's how you specify that you depend on this other library. Here's how you can ensure you have the library"
 
2 hours later…
07:40
Maybe I could just switch to a different build tool...
 
5 hours later…
13:05
@Justin Ha, I'd like to know as well. Let me know if you find some, and I'll put it on my list gist.github.com/milleniumbug/905323f44b1e4b2578e9745fd29562de
the only reason I tolerate this situation is because
Jun 24 at 18:24, by milleniumbug
I use CMake to make IDE changes less painful
IOW, I don't treat CMake as a Autotools replacement, or build engine, but rather as "generate project files for this IDE"
 
7 hours later…
20:25
Hi, I have been struggling on a ques for the past 2 hours. Pls help
16
Q: Linked list recursive reverse

PhoenixI was looking at the code below from stanford library: void recursiveReverse(struct node** head_ref) { struct node* first; struct node* rest; /* empty list */ if (*head_ref == NULL) return; /* suppose first = {1, 2, 3}, rest = {2, 3} */ first = *head_ref; r...

The ques is regd the code in the abv link
I noticed that the variable rest is having the same value for all the recursion call once the code reached beyond the recursiveReverse(&rest). But first->next has different values. I was able to understand why first->next has different values by writing them on a stack and comparing it with each call. But i could not understand how rest is having the same value for all the calls instead of the (rest = first->next) from the stack
Is it because we are passing the address of rest in the function call? Is it matched by the same name of the variable
20:44
@NehaSharma I don't really have time right now, so I won't. It won't hurt to have this question here, maybe someone else will be able to answer.
 
2 hours later…
22:49
I fear I don't understand the question. (regd, abv?)

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