so I'm learning c++ right, and I did what everyone said to do and read Accelerated C++. I've read it twice now and I know quite a bit of syntax, but how do I go from here to actually making something. Should I just do hacker rank exercises? Any project ideas that are basic enough to be doable but complex enough for me to learn something? I need something to keep my motivation up and to help me bridge the gap between someone who knows a bit of c++ and a c++ programmer.
if you absolutely can't think of anything you can go with adventofcode.com but doing something you like is much better motivation than doing what you are told
And I've tried that but I feel like I don't know enough to make a game without following tutorials and then I'm not really making anything @nwp
I'll try making something with just sfml documentation on the site but I feel like I'll get half way through and just get stuck. Also c++ game libraries are a nightmare on windows because I hate visual studio.
I'll give it a go anyway. I'm gonna try reinstalling linux too
@exitcode Maybe you should concentrate on making the program easy to understand and maintainable. If you get stuck it is probably because you have to keep too much stuff in your head and have no concentration left to progress.
@exitcode Work exercises from the book. If you get stuck, skip to the next exercise. When you're all finished, look up others' solutions and use it to compare and improve yours, fix your broken solutions, etc.
@exitcode If you like SFML look at sfgui.sfml-dev.de . It looks learner friendly. Design GUIs for some of the console applications you made during Accelerated C++.
because the moment you've declared these data members as private you've said "this is not a bag of bits, it's an actual type with operations you can call on it"
else why would you hide the data
the compiler in general won't provide you constructors except when it has to
by default, a default constructor, destructor, copy constructor, copy assignment operator, move constructor, and move assignment operator will be generated, unless something prevents it
@exitcode most compilers install somewhere[citation needed]. As long as you set the system path to find them in the command line, any other program can find them. Cygwin is a pain, but Mingw and msys2 work well and use gcc as the backend if I recall. Maybe mess around with shell scripts to get a hang of how to glue programs together in an operating system?
Then it's just a matter of configuring them to link/include your desired path for libraries
@Brandin yeah, shell scripts like .bat usually start in the folder they exist in, but they can use cd to move around the operating system, just like you do in the command prompt.
You'll only be able to escape not understanding your tools for so long, exitcode. Might as well bang your head against the obstacle now and learn to install a compiler+libraries.
I just used the MinGW installer and the mingw-get tool or something and it was fine. That was ages ago, though. I'm sure they must have some newer stuff now. And now there is MinGW-w64, which seems more up-to-date.
If you don't want to mess with installing tools, install Cygwin and then use that. Everything will just work. It will be Cygwin, though, so it's not a "True windows" experience. You will have to say /cygdrive/c/blahblahblah
@milleniumbug I finally got the motivation to do some programming and I've spent the whole day trying to install stuff to let me run hello world and I've been here before so many times
If your goal is to learn I think it should be good enough. After a while you might have renewed motivation to learn to install the tools on native Windows.
So, you hate Visual Studio, yet you just downloaded it (big download as I recall), installed it, and now are complaining about using too much bandwidth...
Is your goal to learn C++. Just start with what you've got now. It's too easy to get lost in tools. For example, maybe you want this or that library. But to build those, you need foo and bar libraries as dependencies, etc. Interesting, but much better to start somewhere.
i don't want to iterate thorugh the entire arrays as they are,(i tried and it was extremely slow),therefore i'm asking,does the memcmp function in c wrritten anywhere?
But if you want to do bit twiddling manually, you'll have to consider stuff like cache structure, data layout in memory, instruction primitives available, etc.
@milleniumbug didn't think there was much point in downloading the previous version when vs 2017 was releasing so soon and the update between 2017rc and 2017 will probably be minimal
i was wrong but nw, I'll get mingw working or I'll use linux
why is mingw so old tho? looks like it hasn't been updated in 5 years
the first rule about using MSYS2: if there's a package X that's named X, and another named mingw-w64-YOUR_TARGET_ARCHITECTURE-X, you install the latter
the latter is a native MinGW package, the former is MSYS which means POSIX emulation
finnf@a;fka;skf; ~ $ pacman -Ss sfml mingw32/mingw-w64-i686-csfml 2.3-2 A simple, fast, cross-platform, and object-oriented multimedia API for C (mingw-w64) mingw32/mingw-w64-i686-sfml 2.3.2-2 A simple, fast, cross-platform, and object-oriented multimedia API (mingw-w64) mingw64/mingw-w64-x86_64-csfml 2.3-2 A simple, fast, cross-platform, and object-oriented multimedia API for C (mingw-w64) mingw64/mingw-w64-x86_64-sfml 2.3.2-2 A simple, fast, cross-platform, and object-oriented multimedia API (mingw-w64)
warning: terminate MSYS2 without returning to shell and check for updates again warning: for example close your terminal window instead of calling exit