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17:01
it's our traditional chat-lang -- never mind ;)
anyway, I have to ask you: what are you trying to do in your code?
what is the goal?
user2620028
My class is touching on the c programming language, i have another one trying to touch on c++, another one trying to teach me pep/8 and assembly lol
user2620028
The goal is to print out the first 30 numbers of this sequence.
Gn =Gn‐1 +Gn‐2 +Gn‐3
user2620028
I wrote the program in another language and perfected the logic and then tried to convert it over to c syntax
user2620028
I am just curious as to what syntax errors i am causing here... Obviously my variables are not being found by the lines trying to use them. I am getting scope errors.
@HatterisMad what other language?
user2620028
17:03
Javascript
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad Shouldn't be impossible, unless you're doing some zany functional stuff.
user2620028
Original code in javascript

function findGOf(n) {
    if (n <= 29 && n > 0) {
        var g = new Array();
        for (var i = 0; i <= n; i++) {
            if (i === 0) {
                g.push(0);
                console.log(i + " = " + g[i]);
            }
            else if (i === 1 || i === 2) {
                g.push(1);
                console.log(i + " = " + g[i]);
            }
            else {
                g.push(g[i - 3] + g[i - 2] + g[i - 1]);
                console.log(i + " = " + g[i]);
user2620028
I really am not
user2620028
I don't think i have to change logic.... Just figure out what syntax errors i am getting :(
user2620028
Except i just noticed in my c code i forgot to change the comparisons from triple = to doubles lol
Qix
Qix
17:06
Other than pushing to an array (you're going to need to find an arraylist implementation in C or do some realloc'ing) that's all pretty standard stuff.
You'll just have to refactor your console.logs into printf's.
And yeah, C is already type strict so === should just be ==.
user2620028
Qix look at the C code i posted above, I should have already hashed out the array alloc
Qix
Qix
That's not C code :)
That's C++.
user2620028
:/
user2620028
I hate universities lol
Qix
Qix
there is no such thing as std:: in C.
That's purely a c++ thing.
user2620028
17:08
if i removed the std:: and just had the cout would it work in c?
Qix
Qix
nope, you'd have to use printf.
Which in your case wouldn't be that hard.
the question is @HatterisMad do you need the array itself filled with the values or printing the values is enough?
user2620028
Jesus christ.... so my professor has been telling everyone in the class this entire time that we are working in c and it is c++
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad If that's really the case, it doesn't surprise me one bit. :)
Qix
Qix
17:09
A professor at BSU here confused Java with C++ at one point.
user2620028
@Qix Yeah i am not surprised about it either. This is just the first time i have delved past c# lol.... I hate .NET
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad now the question is; does it truly need to be C? or can it be C++?
Because those garner two completely different solutions.
(not completely but vastly different)
user2620028
@PeterVaro We could get rid of the array but then would need more variables to hold the previous two values, the logic would have to be rewritten
user2620028
@Qix in all of his code samples there is cout so i am going to gamble c++ on this one
I would definitely do that if I were you...
user2620028
17:11
@Peter why would you get rid of the array?
user2620028
It has to maximum hold 30 elements
because you don't need that;)
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad Then yes, C++. I would also kindly remind him that C does not have cout or any of the std:: namespace (or even namespaces to begin with!)
user2620028
Hahaha @PeterVaro it is a programming assignment for an instructor that doesn't even speak the same language i do. My interest in the class doesn't warrant optimization efforts :P
user2620028
@Qix I don't speak the same language he does so its a mute point.
Qix
Qix
17:12
@HatterisMad sigh still not surprised...
@HatterisMad "moot" btw ;)
user2620028
hahaha yes thank you just noticed that.... was hoping it would slip under the rug :P
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad Anyway, if he's using C++ then use C++. Peter is right; if you don't need an array that big (and you're just outputting values) then you shouldn't have an array that big :)
user2620028
:P You guys are hell bent on me optimizing this.
user2620028
Oh my god i just looked at the code and i didn't even select a data type for my n variable
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad Not necessarily optimizing; just being a good engineer :)
user2620028
17:16
@Qix I am on time crunch so i am not putting more time into it than i have to :/ I am not disagreeing with you just doing what i can when i can.
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad On that note, it's generally a good idea to declare all of your variables at the top of your functions. While C99+ supports declaring variables anywhere, MSVC's implementation of C does not (at least, not without a pre-processor). Generally speaking, writing portable code is always something you should do from the getgo.
@HatterisMad That's for C though; not for C++.
user2620028
Ok
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad No worries :)
user2620028
258 segmentation fault.....
user2620028
overflow of data type error?
Qix
Qix
17:20
@HatterisMad Does it tell you which line? Do you have symbols loaded?
@HatterisMad this is a pure C, without array version:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

static void
sequence(size_t count)
{
    #define MAX_SIZE 30
    printf("Sequence: {");
    if (!count)
    {
        printf("}\n");
        return;
    }
    else if (count >= MAX_SIZE)
    {
        printf("} => Error: Your value is greater "
               "than the maximum value allowed!\n");
        return;
    }

    int _1 = 0,
        _2 = 1,
        _3 = 1,
        item;

    printf("%d, %d, %d", _1, _2, _3);
    for (size_t i=3; i<count; i++)
    {
(first draft ;))
OUTPUT:
user2620028
@Qix it tells me the first line of the main method -- line 5
Sequence: {}
Sequence: {} => Error: Your value is greater than the maximum value allowed!
Sequence: {0, 1, 1, 2, 4, 7, 13, 24, 44, 81, 149, 274, 504, 927, 1705, 3136, 5768, 10609, 19513, 35890, 66012, 121415, 223317, 410744, 755476, 1389537, 2555757, 4700770, 8646064}
Qix
Qix
if (!count) should ideally be count == 0 for verbosity. while !count in javascript is acceptable, it's not generally so in C (although functionally it works).
@Qix all zeros are all false everything else is true
user2620028
17:23
I wouldn't even do that in javacsript lol
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro verbosity Peter. VERBOSITY. *ALL THE VERBOSITY*...
user2620028
Lmao i should probably go into the c++ chat room huh....
@Qix :)
Qix
Qix
@HatterisMad This can be done in C too, though. But perhaps :) I know C++ but others here might not.
@HatterisMad And remember, all ANSI C code also works in C++; not the other way around.
user2620028
Yeah i know it can be done in any turing complete language, but i have to submit it in c++ (apparently) And its not the logic i need help with. Just an unfamiliar syntax
17:24
@Qix false.
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro For modern compilers it does.
only C89 code is fully functional in C++
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro Better? ;)
user2620028
@Qix Whether it works or not its a professor grading it that won't understand it
nope, there are new types, keywords, syntax => 100% not C++ compilant
Qix
Qix
17:25
@PeterVaro ANSI == C89, no?
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro I edited my message.
@HatterisMad True; So then change the printf's to std::cout and you have C++ lol
anyway, back to !var -- if it is scalar or pointer it will always work, and less verbose, and very easy to understand, and also idiomatic in all C-like languages
user2620028
I have never seen variables defined with a _ leading
user3079266
@PeterVaro not all of it. For example, C doesn't require void pointers to be cast, and C++ does.
Qix
Qix
17:28
@PeterVaro True; matter of preference. To me (and a few other devs I know), (!count) reads as if count is false. (count == 0) reads as if count is equal to 0. While they are equivalent, it's just a readability nitpick.
@HatterisMad I just wrote it quick, you can use abcd..ABCD..XYZ, 0..9 and _ for var names
Qix
Qix
@Mints97 Aha, truth.
oh, you're talking about C++
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro Variables cannot start with 0..9.
@HatterisMad a moot point, perhaps :)
17:29
63
A: C/C++ Checking for NULL pointer

RBerteigIn my experience, tests of the form if (ptr) or if (!ptr) are preferred. They do not depend on the definition of the symbol NULL. They do not expose the opportunity for the accidental assignment. And they are clear and succinct. Edit: As SoapBox points out in a comment, they are compatible with...

@Qix and @Mints97 ^
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro That's for pointers specifically.
@Qix @HatterisMad that's Javascript
seriously, console.log should've tipped you what that was
@Qix that was the "exception" what Mints said
@Mints97 yep, C++'s type system is stricter.
there's a list of all of the differences somewhere on SO
sometimes they are quite subtle.
user2620028
@BartekBanachewicz I can't tell if you are trolling or not?
17:32
@HatterisMad what?
why?
@HatterisMad oh damn I've scrolled up and noticed another sample
user2620028
I had written the logic in Javascript and then tried converting it to c++ syntax and i am having syntax issues :P
user2620028
Hahaha thats why :P
@HatterisMad oh okay, my bad. Excuse me, it's been a long day. So, have you solved the problems? I might be able to help.
user2620028
Still have a syntax error
can you put the code on Coliru?
@HatterisMad oh, sure, that's an easy fix. Gimme a sec.
user2620028
Segmentation fault, i imagine i am instantiating my array incorrectly... or have an index out of bounds, or i am accessing the array elements incorrectly.
okay, so the problems, in order I've noticed them
user2620028
Oh it actually gives you a much nicer error explanation
1. Use <cstdio> instead of <stdio.h>, and actually avoid both if you can.
2. Use std::vector for variable-length arrays (C++ doesn't have VLAs)
user2620028
17:36
What is the differences in them?
3. The proper way to chain output to cout is cout << a << b << c;
user2620028
Where do i chain output to cout?
@HatterisMad stdio.h is a legacy C header. <cstdio> is a C++ version of that header, with safer and better versions of the C functions, enclosed in a namespace.
@HatterisMad for example, std::cout << (i + " = " + g[i]);
user2620028
Oh gotcha :/
Should be std::cout << i << " = " << g[i];
C++ doesn't coerce (convert) arguments to string when you use + like JS does.
Qix
Qix
17:38
@BartekBanachewicz Huh? That question is about C++...
also, you don't have to enclose assignments in parens.
6 mins ago, by Bartek Banachewicz
@HatterisMad oh damn I've scrolled up and noticed another sample
brb\
Qix
Qix
@BartekBanachewicz Oh lol :)
user2620028
Thats purely habit for my readability :P
Qix
Qix
Doing an Ubuntu release upgrade over SSH; I, too, like to live on the edge.
user2620028
LOL really....
17:40
@HatterisMad not trying to force you or anything, but it's really not idiomatic
people like me start wondering "why does he do that?" :)
user2620028
Lol yep i do that in all languages i write in whether its enclosed in a function wrapping parens or not
Also you should inverse if logic (tell me if that needs to be explained)
user2620028
@BartekBanachewicz I am now receiving what i believe to be casting issues with the cout converted from + to <<
user2620028
It is trying to cast the " = " as an operator now?
user2620028
17:46
@BartekBanachewicz SON OF A..... that is the first time the parens have ever stopped me from receiving the ouput i was desiring o.O
@HatterisMad don't blame yourself, that syntax (<<) is absolutely dumb.
it can be done way better in modern C++, but it's not in standard library and implementation of it is way too hard for a beginner to justify blind copypasting into code.
user2620028
Now the last bit i need to figure out is basic user input to int variable. I should be able to google that
user2620028
cin >> age..... wtf is this assembly
@HatterisMad this direction actually isn't that dumb. I dunno if you know what declarative parsers are, but there's some resemblance :)
user2620028
Yeah i know the reason they do it and it makes sense, just makes me angry when something works as expected and is obvious :/ First world problems?
user2620028
@BartekBanachewicz http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/d533779569a89e0e
Getting an end1 not declared in this scope.... How is that? It is the same scope as when i use it after that too
@HatterisMad endL, not end1! :)
it's short for "endline"
user2620028
lmao
user2620028
Nice
user2620028
I wondered who in the fuck came up with such a terrible name for a variable holding "\n"
18:01
@HatterisMad it's not just that; it flushes the output stream.
user2620028
Am i missing something on cin >> n;
@HatterisMad "5n"? What's that supposed to mean?
user2620028
somehow in the process of me saving it i fat fingered the 5 key on the keyboard lol.... sorry i fixed that and compiled on my local copy and it skipped the pause and wait for input
@HatterisMad post the full code on coliru again (you can use "edit" button")
user2620028
18:06
I have been using the edit button :P There you go
18:18
should work
user2620028
Thats what i thought too
also "using namespace" is discouraged
user2620028
:/ damn lol i like that a lot
@HatterisMad being more explicit is typically better in programming
except when it's tedious boilerplate like C
in this case, you can use using std::vector; using std::cin; using std::cout etc.
makes it clearer
user2620028
Yeah but any idea why it is not taking my input?
18:25
since it has nothing to do with C any more @BartekBanachewicz and @HatterisMad I suggest you to continue the discussion at Bartek's C++ room
@HatterisMad how are you launching it?
are you using an IDE?
user2620028
No, running it entirely in coliru
well it won't take your input in coliru :)
user2620028
I am on a work computer and not aloud to download anything on my network lol
user2620028
Ok i didn't know that
user2620028
18:26
So that code should work....... maybe.... i am not sure if it is outputting g(n) right now or g(n-1)
(finally -- sorry for the pings)
@HatterisMad np. here
user2620028
I got it bartek
user2620028
It was outputting n-1 and i fixed it
yeah, but the link shows how you can emulate std input. Might be useful in the future :)
user2620028
18:28
Yeah that is helpful thank you
user2620028
@BartekBanachewicz Jeebus that helped me a lot bartek. I have an instructor who speaks chinese and not english so it is hell to go through his instructions to try and achieve the most simple programming logic
user2620028
Also thank you peter and qix you guys helped me out a lot too
@HatterisMad oh that sounds bad
user2620028
19:26
It was much worse when i had him for data structures and algorithms. I already knew the material but the tests were nightmares of misspelled nodes and trees
19:46
ugh... feeling so dumb today...
@Kamiccolo today is a meh day
@BartekBanachewicz couldn't agree more :| It must be the moon...
20:17
and I had to crack an original game I bought :S
20:40
helloc @Sebastian;
I was just thinking which programming language has a better future C or java?
that's a question like, which tool has better future, the hammer or the screwdriver?
their abstract purpose is the same: "connect two pieces with a third element"
hehe hmm
20:44
but their shapes are different, their third element is different
even the pieces we put together are different
the same goes to C and Java -- they are both programming languages
but they were designed for different purposes
@PeterVaro hmmm... I'd put this a bit another way. Screwdriver or screw. Hammer or nail. Glass or window.
if the question is about: which programming language will stay here longer
I will bet on C over Java, and that's because higher level languages technically can replace Java "in no time"
while C as a system language also could be replaced (that's why C++ is created in the first place: it supposed to be a better C)
but because the language is simple (very small, tight, minimal) and it is here with us for almost half a century now.. (and still rocks actually)
I don't think it will go away anytime soon
@Sebastian what do you think?
haha great Thanks Peter
hmm
@Kamiccolo hmm -- that's also a nice analogy
where is that analogy is heading?
20:52
actually I am in middle of nowhere right now. I have finished my studies. I so wanted to be an Oracle DBA, but Ihave to have lots of years of experience before I eventually become one. That's why I am studying java in a higher level and C along with it
@Peter
@Sebastian well, if you know, you want to develop enterprise software -- then focus on Java only
and on other very high level languages (Python, Ruby, Perl, Lua, etc.)
@PeterVaro hmmm... probably it's heading to some kind of drastical point the C isn't going to be the main base for any of other higher level language. Though... can't see this kind of future yet. For example... maybe with JS it's going to some kind of similar analogy. Like.... everything is compiled into JS because it's too difficult, error prone, obscure , whatever to write purely in it.
and I think instead of C, you also should focus on web-related languages (like JavaScript)
But still someone has to write browsers, engines, compilers, renderers whatever. Which is mainly something not that far from C.
Peter Thanks for the tips bro, lovely :-)
20:56
oh, back to ressemblence to JS --- if You want to be a pro at web front-end, You must learn it. Despite there are plenty of alternatives being compiled into it....
@Kamiccolo well, I think C will be replaced, once we have a nice alternative with the same power and control -- however IMHO the real reason why C is here
because it is a very very very thin abstraction layer on the machine
nothing less, nothing more..
kamiccolo great :-)
everything else will be more complex -- as we already talked about it: eventually not the code itself, but the compiler, the parser, the language/syntax, etc.
@Kamiccolo source to source compilers are great, they really are, but (the next statement is absolutely a personal opinion, I don't have any proof) I think they will never be as small and effective as the "natively" written version
and tbh I think it is a good thing to learn a new language, even if it is as horrible as JavaScript itself
20:59
@PeterVaro purely theoretical lamda calculus was this kind of breakthrough. Assembly was this kind of breakthrough and thin abstraction layer. Now C is. And still we need assembly developers. Yes, not that much, but the technology hasn't progressed that far we could forget it.
rather than using the same language everywhere, hoping it will fit all the needs
@PeterVaro Proper tools for different problems :}
exactly!
some hardcore JS developer even think that using frameworks such as jQuery or Angular is a bad thing
But layers are vertical progress. Differentiation of problems and proper tools ---- horizontal xP
not to mention that you are writing in another language which will be compiled to JS
@Kamiccolo or the other way around => POV ;)
and @Sebastian if you want bend your mind (which is also a nice idea sometimes) you should also learn Common Lisp or Haskell for example
Qix
Qix
21:05
@PeterVaro I am one of those.
@Qix well, I only started JS not so long ago, so I have no idea if they are good or bad...
I read a few articles about their advantages and disadvantages
@peter these two are programming languages?
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro The idea behind angular is cool, but completely bloated. jQuery is irrelevant anymore. It makes sense if you need support in super old browsers.
@Sebastian yes they are, very special ones, we call them "functional programming languages"
okay :)
21:08
@Qix but still, all job listings about JS starts with: you have to be a hardcore jQuery, Backbone and ANgular hacker
@Sebastian read about them, try them => won't be easy, I can tell you that
(they need a very different mindset)
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro Because those translate to dollars. They create slow, bulky sites that can be turned over quickly, allowing project managers to bill clients large amounts of money for sites that don't take very long to produce. :)
hmm :D
Qix
Qix
(I know these things; I work at a company that used to do that, and my last few companies were epitomes of those kinds of companies)
@Qix now everything makes sense :)
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro Their API's are simplified, sure. But the amount that's abstracted away (compatibility checks, state checks, inefficient loops and function call overhead, etc.) make them stupidly slow.
/rant
21:11
@Qix I started learning from this book (I already read it): Professional JavaScript for Web Developers, 3rd Edition
what do you think about it? do you know it?
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro I've not read a javascript book before. :) Never heard of it. However, if it's about Ecmascript 3 or above (preferably 5) and is completely vanilla (doesn't rely on jquery or any frameworks like that to teach javascript) then it's kosher in my opinion
@Qix yes and yes and yes
@Qix like... Mosaic? Netscape Navigator? xP
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro Yeah just reading the overview it even talks about what's coming with Harmony. Sounds solid, actually.
@Kamiccolo Probably not that far back ;) smartass
aaaagh... still remember that juicy Netscape Composer. Still got plenty of books for it... sooo nostalgic, can't get rid of those...
21:13
I don't like learning languages from book though, I only take this exception because there are so many bullshit articles and tuts about js
a js-beginner cannot decide who is right
everyone is writing everything and you have to be aware about the author
@PeterVaro I'd say that's at least partly a flaw of language itself. Obscurity and too damn many ways of doing trivial stuff....
@PeterVaro And in the age of internet --- everyone is an author :}
@Kamiccolo yeah, but this is especially true, when you also have to focus on the implementation details as well, as the language standards, gotchas, etc.
I think to learn js the right way is a great challenge
:)
@Qix sigh good ;)
@PeterVaro ugh... not mentioning gotchas with different versions of the compiler/interpreter/library/whatever...
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro That's honestly one of the things I like about native programming :)
@Qix -- umm .. what exactly? :P
Qix
Qix
21:18
@PeterVaro Worrying about implementation details, delving into the machine code, etc.
Version A: You should do X Y Z!
Version B: You shouldn't do X Y Z! Only T U V instead!
Version C: You should do only X Y Z. T U V is deprecated...
@Qix hmm.. interesting.. because with C I never felt this -- I'm using what is in the standard and that's all
and if a compiler says they have what the standard is saying, then I can be sure it will work there
as it should be
@Qix Feels like a craft? ^_^
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro I do a lot of low-level coding too though. I like writing between higher level languages and then incorporating machine code written by hand, etc.
@Kamiccolo Oh definitely. Native programming, for me, is an art. Web development is a job.
I see, I don't write machine code myself.. @Qix is this because of the special musical hardwares you are working with?
Qix
Qix
21:20
@PeterVaro That, and a few hacky things I've done.
Qix
Qix
@PeterVaro I was writing a small library that created true native bindings in C++, that allowed you to create a true c-func out of a this-object and a method.
Not a std::function or any sort of variation. Something you could pass directly to a c-style function pointer parameter, for example.
sounds fun actually ;)
Qix
Qix
Used a bridge allocated on the heap populated from a template ASM procedure that 'hard coded' the this object's address into it, shifted arguments up and injected it into the appropriate register given the architecture's calling convention.
I have it working on Win32/64, GCC x86/amd64, and I've been battling with IA32 (clang/mac)
I never did embedded C before -- I only use MicroPython (for pyboard) and Python (for RPi) and Wiring (for Arduino) to do some magic with microcontrollers..
Qix
Qix
21:24
Because of the way they frame their procedures causes a segfault.
but I want to hack on that low-level sometime..
Qix
Qix
Yeah low-level stuff, once you get the hang of it and learn how to read the documentation (R/M bytes, etc.) it's a thrill.
GDB is also pretty fun to work with.
there are so many things I want to learn and try ;)
Qix
Qix
:)
@Qix and takes plenty of time to master truely... :/ ugh...powerful, indeed.
Qix
Qix
21:32
@Kamiccolo Yeah for sure. Super powerful, though. I want to integrate it in with something like Atom, or even Vim, and have true in-code debugging.
Not sure that sublime could facilitate something like that.
@Qix I saw/tried 3rd party complete REPLs coded for sublime, so almost anything is possible
but the truth is, ST's own console could be slow, not always, not for all tasks, but it could be
if I can, I use a proper terminal-emulator and lldb
@Qix ha, and people call Eclipse powerful! This does sound like a great idea!
okay, I call it a night.. I got pretty sick, I think I haver fever too.. my throat hurts, my head aches, I can't eat.. yesterday took me 7 hours to sleep.. :( And tomorrow I have a job-interview.. :P
it was a pleasure guys,
goto sleep;
sleep:
    free all;
Qix
Qix
free @PeterVaro;
@Kamiccolo Vim already has libclang integration for fuzzy completion through YouCompleteMe (It's kinda buggy and only works under perfect circumstances; I have it working on linux at home) but nothing for GDB integration.
Huh, today I learned GDB can debug Java.
21:49
@Qix as I remember, there is GDB spin-off for Java called JDB... or is it just pimped GDB?
Qix
Qix
Not sure, but I just read GDB's docs
> GDB is a source-level debugger, capable of breaking programs at any specific line, displaying variable values, and determining where errors occurred. Currently, gdb supports C, C++, D, Objective-C, Fortran, Java, OpenCL C, Pascal, assembly, Modula-2, and Ada. A must-have for any serious programmer.
been using that YouCompleteMe for a while... :} but's it's alive just because libclang modularity and proper API... not sure if You could something like that out of gcc. At least without plenty of hackish solutions...
Qix
Qix
@Kamiccolo You can't, not easily or without hacks. GCC doesn't provide an API.
Not that I've seen, at least. Clang is the one all the development tools derive off of/interface with.
brb, goto do_paperwork;
free @Qix;
@PeterVaro sleep well and good luck tomorrow :}
 
2 hours later…
23:36
Helloc
It's interesting how when creating my own class in Objc, I need to make a method for a variable to return itself when "called"/
Qix
Qix
23:51
@Owatch Objective C is the spawn of Satan and the pure manifestation of hellfire.
The apparent explanation is that code outside of a class should not directly read or write to instance variables of an instance of that class.
Qix
Qix
@Owatch That's fascist encapsulation for you.
So a method is used to effectively pass a copy of it.
Qix
Qix
@Owatch That's also the convention of Java.
Getters/Setters.
I don't know, I just do what the book tells me.
Yes, getters and setters.
It seems like a waste of code to me, but he author doesn't pitch it as optional.
Qix
Qix
23:54
@Owatch There's a good chance it's not in ObjC. I've never touched the horrid language so I wouldn't know. I know many devs are dogmatic about it, and thankfully in native languages it's usually optimized out by most modern day compilers.
You're saying it is unnecessary?
And the Authors preference?
06:00 - 17:0017:00 - 00:00

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