Lounge<C++>

Today we're daydreaming about C++26 reflection
May 29, 2012 08:58
@KodeSeeker: apologies for dropping the discussion, had to make a phone call. It looks like if you want to track down why it's failing you're going to need to step into the library code and take a look at the point it fails. Running it under a debugger and looking at the call stack would give you some hints. Assuming that you don't want to take the approach that a few people have suggested of trying a different book/tutorial
May 29, 2012 08:33
@KodeSeeker - and did you get it linking to a consistent version of the lib with the version you were running... i.e. did you do a release build of StanfordLib.lib and link to that instead of the one that you were previously linking to, or switch to linking to the debug CRT in your application (as per your discusion with Jeremy?)
May 29, 2012 08:29
to get rid of the pdb warnings you just need to copy the mentioned pdb files from the build (Debug/Release) directory for StanfordLib to the directory containing the lib file that you're linking to (StanfordLib.lib)
May 29, 2012 08:25
@KodeSeeker: for example

int main(){
cout << "entered main" << endl;
initGraphics();
cout << "after initGraphics()" << endl;
setColor("BLUE");
cout << "after setColor()" << endl;
Takes 30 seconds to add and quickly tells you whether it's even got to your main method
May 29, 2012 08:24
oops - meant to edit that, not used to this chat window
May 29, 2012 08:24
int main(){
initGraphics();
setColor("BLUE");
May 29, 2012 08:21
@KodeSeeker: The error code 0xc0000417 corresponds to STATUS_INVALID_CRUNTIME_PARAMETER, which is probably not being raised by anything you've written directly. Have you tried the low tech debugging approach of sticking a printf/std::cout statement inbetween each call into the library to see which one it's crashing in?