Ah, thanks. I saw people talking about C++ server side programming, for exmaple gaming server side programming. But for exmaple all the linux API are implemented in C.
Then in which way C++ makes a difference I wonder?
All of Win32 is also a C API. Most operating system APIs are at the lowest level C APIs because C actually has a stable defined ABI. If you want to use C++ features, use C++, if you think C is enough, use C
Oh, yeah sure, you can pretty easily use C API with C++ just doing extern "C"{ #include "some_c_header.h" } is about all you need to do
there's some newer C features that could potentially cause issues, but they're rarely used in the header files. Especially for APIs that are also used by other languages and their FFI
Then the only benefit comes from C++ language itself? For example, OOP, vector sort of thing?
Is there C++ libraries that wraps those low level linux C api, does the dirty work and I can just directly include some header files and call the function in a C++ manner/OOP way? Or in fact that's unecessary?
I don't know any such library. There's a bunch of higher-level network libraries that use sockets under the hood. If it's just sockets then doing a simple RAII wrapper is just not that big of a plus imho
@PeterT windows ME wasn't actually problematic per se, the switch in driver models was. This is why ME was a failure as an upgrade. ME really forced the WDM, moving away from the legacy DOS drivers that 98 supported as legacy (but people used because lazy).
@PeterT But don't people need to know what kind of Error the API throws? How do they do it? with logging? But I do not see people in my company do it..
@ratchetfreak it's basically a work around for the fact that it is just a typedef and so it lets the analyzer check to see if people are checking the return correctly
Damn I didn't realize that using C functions in C++ would be so easy. Just wrap anything with extern "C" { include <sys/socket.h>} and then it's good to go . :(
just don't include any X11 headers, the have some of the most annoying macro names in them. They are the second most annoying header after Windows.h that I've encountered
@PeterT I clicked "go to declaration" and do a simple search with ( extern "C") keyword. I didn't find any match so then I decided to add my own extern.
@Mgetz Another (and last) question. If I include a C library function and compile without error. Does it ensure that the library I included is C++ compatiable and then I can safely use it?