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November 11th, 2009, 03:00 PM
D'oh, of course!
Thank you!
:D
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November 11th, 2009, 11:47 AM
No idea how it does it, but does the OS need to do something similar when it reads/writes to/from the page file? :)
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November 11th, 2009, 11:08 AM
Not being funny here but ... what if someone takes a photo of the screen with a digital camera?
.... oh edit: ProgramArtist beat me to it.
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November 11th, 2009, 11:06 AM
Could the source code being saved as Unicode cause such a problem?
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November 11th, 2009, 10:52 AM
For the actual question, please see below the [ code ] section, but first some background:
The CPImportKey function is listed in Visual Studio 2005's MSDN as being part of the "Platform SDK:...
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You are right, I've edited my post!
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No, that's an indexer.
I mean:
...
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C# does not support indexed properties - something which C++/CLI (and I think VB.net) does support.
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That is C and therefore you should really ask here: http://www.codeguru.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=9
The answer to your question is that you should use == instead of = in the if statements.
:)
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Yes, of course you would.
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You could include the ActiveX DLL in your EXE as a resource. At runtime you extract the DLL to a folder, register it, and then create the ActiveX control.
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Perhaps ask in the Win32 section: http://www.codeguru.com/forum/forumdisplay.php?f=47
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April 24th, 2009, 08:36 AM
There's really not enough info here for me to answer the question.
In which function does the following take place?
Keyboard kb;
ApplicationState appState;
...
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April 24th, 2009, 07:32 AM
Well then I would hope that Chuck Norris doesn't write checking tools ... tools which really SHOULD know. :D
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April 24th, 2009, 03:21 AM
Even a try-catch block in a destructor is not enough - if the destructor is called due to an exception being thrown and it then somehow throws its own exception, we suddenly have two active...
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April 23rd, 2009, 10:15 AM
This is the C++ forum. Matlab forum is -> that way -> I think.
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April 23rd, 2009, 06:29 AM
His example uses classes which can generate errors (exceptions?) in their destructors - that is something I try to avoid.
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April 23rd, 2009, 03:42 AM
I always use the local static approach:
class Something
{
public:
static Something& Instance();
private:
Something();
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April 20th, 2009, 10:10 AM
One difference is that 'global data' usually was lumped together in one big interdependent mess, while singletons can be used on their own. If a class uses a number of singletons, those singletons...
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April 20th, 2009, 04:52 AM
What do you need help with?
Do you know how to input and output the numbers?
Do you know how to use the functions in the <cmath> header file?
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April 20th, 2009, 04:02 AM
Not to mention holding financial information in floats!
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April 6th, 2009, 11:30 AM
BYTE *ba = new BYTE[len];
ZeroMemory(ba, sizeof(ba)*(len));
You are allocating far less bytes (len) than you are using (sizeof(ba)*len).
Note that sizeof(ba) is 'size of pointer to byte'...
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April 3rd, 2009, 06:43 AM
You could do this:
class MyClass
{
public:
MyClass()
: my_array( 1000, std::vector<MyStruct>(500) ) // 1000 vectors with 500 MyStruct-s each.
{
}
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April 3rd, 2009, 04:51 AM
As kempofighter indicated, std::list (and std::vector) uses an allocator class to get (and free) the memory it needs:
template < class T, class Allocator = allocator<T> > class list;
...
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April 3rd, 2009, 03:59 AM
That is correct and would normally be the best solution.
However:
No, a BSTR is UNICODE in Windows:
http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/ms221069.aspx
If he should not return a...
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