@JerryCoffin Thanks for the input; in this case, the functions have to check and they know what error message to return. But I'll return true for success, it makes more sense in this case too.
Heyyo! Currently working in C and got a quick question. When you use fscanf to read from a file, is there a way to give it a very specific format (as in, will it accept it under any circumstances)? For example:
In computer science, a recursive descent parser is a kind of top-down parser built from a set of mutually recursive procedures (or a non-recursive equivalent) where each such procedure usually implements one of the productions of the grammar. Thus the structure of the resulting program closely mirrors that of the grammar it recognizes.
A predictive parser is a recursive descent parser that does not require backtracking. Predictive parsing is possible only for the class of LL(k) grammars, which are the context-free grammars for which there exists some positive integer k that allows a recursive descent...
I'm seeing #endif at the bottom of every .h file in my legacy solution. I'm wondering if there is any case in which you wouldn't end the .h file with #endif. I'm using embarcadero c++ builder.
Some people use #pragma once which replaces include guards and then you wouldn't need #if/#endif. Technically #pragma once is non-standard, but every compiler supports it.
the one time I've seen the #ifdef not span the entire header is in math.h where you can get a set of constants macros defined if you have a specific define set. But it needs to work even if math.h was already included
so if my .h file looks like this: <----- should I put my #include "something.h" here? #ifndef Class500H #define Class500H <----- should I put my #include "something.h" here? #endif <----- should I put my #include "something.h" here?
In the middle probably. Putting it on the top will also work. Putting it on the bottom will not work because you have to #include stuff before you use it, and arguably you are using something between the #if and #endif, otherwise you wouldn't #include "something.h".
The old object technically still exists because you never called the destructor. I think. So it would continue to own whatever it owned before. Probably.
Is the following code legal in C++?
template<typename T>
class Foo {
public:
Foo(T& v) : v_(v) {}
private:
T& v_;
};
int a = 10;
Foo<int> f(a);
void Bar(int& a) {
new (&f)Foo<int>(a);
}
References are not supposed to be bound twice, right?
I'm not sure invoking the dtor is strictly necessary to get defined behavior, but if your object contains some non-trivial type, re-using it's storage without destroying it properly is rather rude at best.