No one has voted on any posts yet. Votes from other community members are used to determine a member's reputation amongst their peers.
9 Posted Topics
Hey all, I'm currently somewhat new to Java, but not to programming, so I appologize if there's an obvious way to do this. Anyway, I'm currently writing a peice of code that I hope will be a graphical front end to GDB because I hate all the other front-ends, it …
I'm currently working on a dictionary library in C and would like to start using struct's for easy assignment. Now, I have several functions that need to be a member in said struct's. I have it working well using pointers, but my only problem is that I would like to …
I've recently been trying to get only a certain number of tokens into a char array. Here, I'll try to clarify; "Jill went to the grocery market to buy tomatoes while fapping". What I've been trying to do is get the thing she's buying, get what she was doing (i.e. …
Hello all... again, I'm trying to write a function that will "simulate" the stack. Here's what I have so far... [code=C++] int i = 0; int arraySize; char * stack[100]; void stackPush(char * pushed) { if(i == 100) { cout << "ERROR: Stack overflow!"; } else { stack[i] = pushed; …
-First post Woot!- Alright, here's the problem; I'm building a _very_ simple Terminal-like program. The only problem is that in a normal Terminal (be it in Linux or Windows' "Command Prompt") there is no definitive number of inputs that you can input, for instance; you can either type "dir", or …
I was looking up the stack, and trying to implement it in an array, and came across this code: [code=C++]void push(STACK *ps, int x) { if (ps->size == STACKSIZE) { fputs("Error: stack overflow\n", stderr); abort(); } else ps->items[ps->size++] = x; } [/code] I know what it all does, except the …
In C++ instead of having "using System;", you would write something along the lines of "#include <iostream>". You're going to have to find the right include files, for what you want to do (which seems like iostream, and windows.h would be all your include files for this program). Also, you …
I recently wanted to get involved in C++0x (Native, OS independent thread support?! Heck yes I want that!), and it seemed as though my compiler supports it. So, I added it in Code::Blocks, under Settings >> Compiler and debugger.. >> Global Compiler Settings >> checked "Have g++ follow the comming …
'Ello again, I have a question about C++ GUI's, with Code::Blocks as my IDE. Whenever I make a basic GUI with the Win32 API, it always creates a console _and_ the GUI (as shown in the picture attached). I was wondering how to only create the GUI, or at least …
The End.
MrAppleseed