I am looking for a way to get the output of a command when it is run from within a C++ program. I have looked at using the system() function, but that will just execute a command. Here's an example of what I'm looking for:
std::string result = system("./some_command");
I need to run an arbitr...
So I'm able to access the login page just fine. But when I try to login, I get this error: "Failed to connect to server. Check your network connection and try again. url: /user/server-scripts/login-user.php data: [object Object]"
Now the actual file path for login-user.php is: /var/www/html/user/server-scripts/login-user.php
There's a PDF I'm reading which says that a pointer is invalid after it passes out of scope.
See slide #14 in the file below:
http://ocw.mit.edu/courses/electrical-engineering-and-computer-science/6-087-practical-programming-in-c-january-iap-2010/lecture-notes/MIT6_087IAP10_lec05.pdf
Now I wrot...
This follows it: # # Relax access to content within /var/www. # <Directory "/var/www"> AllowOverride None # Allow open access: Require all granted </Directory>
When we return from function, if return value is a pointer, it must be define as static. Is this true for heap memory allocated pointer (such as new/malloc pointers),too?
consider this example:
#include"stdio.h"
char * func()
{
char * X=new char[10];
X[0]='C';
x[1]='\0';
return ...
There is this too: # # Relax access to content within /var/www. # <Directory "/var/www"> AllowOverride None # Allow open access: Require all granted </Directory>
@Archer no, people use malloc to heap allocate in C
you could just try and see if this is the actual config that gets loaded by changing the port to something like 8070, restarting apache and see if you can reach the login page on that port
If I initialize a class like this: TestClass testing = TestClass(24);, why doesn't it call the copy or move assignment operator on that =? Is there something special that happens for nameless temporaries?
It seems like it's looking for a constructor like explicit TestClass::TestClass(TestClass other) but that's not a valid copy constructor, and I'm quite puzzled as to what constructor it's calling when the existing move and copy constructors are set to non-explicit (they don't seem to be executed at all on that line)
I'm also not sure why it couldn't just take a const reference (const TestClass&) to the temporary, instead of looking for an overload that took in TestClass