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thread by: girays |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: girays
Hello everyone,
I have a simple problem what I don't know the exact syntac for this.
My code is shown below:
enum LengthType
{
LENGTH_METER = 0,
LENGTH_KMETER,
LENGTH_YARD, // 1 yard = 0,914 meter
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thread by: Nick Keighley |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: Nick Keighley
On 14 Apr, 08:36, InuY4sha <inuy4...@gmail.comwrote:
but you're wrong :-)
the topic of this ng is the C programming language and
*not* the systems that happen to be written in C.
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thread by: esclepius |
last post Aug 23 '08 by: mdh
In the following little bit of code, I understand what and why the
error is, ( lack of parentheses in *pp.y , thus declaring 'y' a
pointer, which it is not) but what I don't get is the error the
compiler raises.
int main (int argc, const char * argv) {
struct point {
int x;
int y;
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thread by: spamkiller1960 |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: spamkiller1960
spam
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thread by: majorcolletmkvu |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: majorcolletmkvu
bf 1942 patch
http://cracks.12w.net
F
R
E
E
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thread by: ravipatil29 |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: ravipatil29
please send me the notes of this subject and c language
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thread by: gokul |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: gokul
Know more details on Programming languages C/C++
http://www.blogonprogramming.blogspot.com
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thread by: Eugeny Myunster |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: Eugeny Myunster
test
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thread by: asha.chandran |
last post Jul 21 '08 by: joseph cook
whether dynamic binding ,runtime polymorphism & late binding are of
same concepts?
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thread by: Rainer Weikusat |
last post Aug 6 '08 by: Willem
Chris Torek <nospam@torek.netwrites:
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thread by: chow.tra |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: chow.tra
Hello All!
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thread by: mathews9138 |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: Hans Mull
Hi all! Where can I read about this topic? Thanks in advance.
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thread by: user923005 |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: user923005
On May 13, 10:21*am, "Robbie Hatley"
<see.my.signat...@for.my.email.addresswrote:
Not really, but you can do like I did in chapter 13 of "C Unleashed":
Windows line endings:
http://www.cpax.org.uk/prg/portable/c/unleashed/code/cubookcode.zip
Unix line endings:
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thread by: spinoza1111 |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: spinoza1111
I want the GUI of the spinoza system to not piss me off with the
usual
type of progress reporting one sees: the flashy, colorful, and
utterly
uninformative gizmos that go back and forth and round and round until
who knows when.
Therefore, the following C Sharp .Net code constitutes a theory of
progress reporting.
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thread by: Daniel Pfeiffer |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: Daniel Pfeiffer
Makepp is a drop-in replacement for GNU make which has a number of
features that allow for more reliable builds and simpler build files.
Finally here's again a new well tested beta snapshot. Besides numerous
general improvements and bug fixes, a highlight of this version is the
much enhanced support for all Windows environments.
There...
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thread by: Nikki Locke |
last post Sep 14 '08 by: Nikki Locke
Available C++ Libraries FAQ
URL: http://www.trumphurst.com/cpplibs/
This is a searchable list of libraries and utilities (both free
and commercial) available to C++ programmers.
If you know of a library which is not in the list, why not fill
in the form at http://www.trumphurst.com/cpplibs/cppsub.php
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thread by: Ian Collins |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: Ian Collins
Jerry Coffin wrote:
I think it's also a matter of delegation; one delegates the management
of the resource to the object implementing RAII. Any cleanup code is
encapsulated in that object and only needs to be maintained in one place.
--
Ian Collins.
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thread by: michael.goossens |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: LR
1>e:\development\root\root\vector3.h(24) : warning C4114: same type
qualifier used more than once
1>e:\development\root\root\vector3.h(24) : warning C4114: same type
qualifier used more than once
1>e:\development\root\root\vector3.h(82) : warning C4114: same type
qualifier used more than once
line 24: Vector3( const Vector3 const * v );...
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thread by: pereges |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: pereges
#include <stdio.h>
#include <math.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main(void)
{
unsigned long int numpoints;
printf("Enter num of points\n");
scanf("%lu", &numpoints);
unsigned long int numpointsx = sqrt((double)numpoints);
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thread by: barcaroller |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: barcaroller
I've noticed that neither container.begin() nor container.end() return an
error when the container is empty, so I get a nasty segfault when I
dereference the iterator. Do I have to check if the container is empty
every time I use an iterator, or am I missing something?
Speaking of iterators: if I initialize 'iter = container.end()', can I...
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thread by: abhash |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: Pete Becker
I am bit puzzled at the following piece of code I tried:
----------------------------------------------------------------------------------
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
class Test {
public:
Test() { cout<<"Cons\n";}
Test(Test& a) { cout<<"Copy cons\n";}
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thread by: sunil |
last post Aug 13 '08 by: sunil
Hello All,
reading http://docs.sun.com/source/819-3690/Program_Org.html#37468, I
see there are two ways to instantiate templates: template definitions
included, template definitions separate, does template definitions
separate mean there will be only one copy of instantiated template
code per type ?
Also the compiler options:...
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thread by: Christopher |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: Christopher
On Apr 11, 12:07 am, Ian Collins <ian-n...@hotmail.comwrote:
I've never seen those implemented _inside_ the class, but defined and
implemented outside the class and then made a friend of the class.
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thread by: dizzy |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: James Kanze
James Kanze wrote:
Correct, the char const* uses are very few to worth those versions.
Good idea, in my case the code is to be used only on POSIX systems but I'll
keep that in mind because I too like to write portable code even when not
required.
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thread by: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Marcel_M=FCller?= |
last post Jun 27 '08 by: =?ISO-8859-1?Q?Marcel_M=FCller?=
clintonb wrote:
:-)
You did not catch what is going on here, isn't it?
The compiler cannot even store the fractional number 9.495 in a IEEE
float storage, because that number is not an element of the domain of
the double data type.
So your application was never compiled with 9.495. Beyond this it
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