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Steve Hansen wrote: In C# it just says that the comma is invalid there.
yah
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Unless there are side effects of the other conditions, your example is the equaivant of this:
if (condE)
{
...
}
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Right. One can probably do awful things using commas given the right modulation of commas and semicolons - even outside variable declarations and for-statements.
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Doc Lobster wrote: One can probably do awful things using commas
... such as implementing an assignment library[^]
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I how the docs page starts with that quote from Stroustrup.
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So, next time you quit a job because you hate it, don't forget to throw in a few commas here and there
My current favourite word is: PIE!
I have changed my name to my regular internet alias. But don't let the 'Genius' part fool you, you don't know what 'SK' stands for.
-The Undefeated
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hehe.. I like your style
Michael Davey
biproject.com rss and blog news in a more palatable format
mobile edition now available!
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Comma operator generates right operand value so condE for this example.
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easiest mistake is not comma
is == sign by just =
from,
-= aLbert =-
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Of course in C++ the comma operator can be overloaded like most others.
So one can make things really interesting.
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Hi, I found this code in an old VB6 app that we need to "upgrade" (in fact replace with a new one be a much better approach, but...)
cbo_Caminos is a ComboBox, o_rs is defined as ADODB.Recordset
If CInt(Trim(Mid(cbo_Caminos.Text, 151, 6))) = CInt(o_Rs.Fields("NroCamino")) Then<br />
....<br />
'do something <br />
End If<br />
And yes o_Rs.Fields("NroCamino") is an integer
Why not use ItemData of the combobox to store de integer value associated whit the content of the combobox text?
More on the same form
Private Sub .......()<br />
Dim o_rs As New ADODB.Recordset <br />
Dim s_Sql As String<br />
<br />
s_Sql = "" <br />
s_Sql = "Select * from ......" <br />
<br />
Set o_rs = New ADODB.Recordset <br />
Set o_rs = DBConnect.Execute(s_Sql)<br />
.....<br />
.....<br />
<br />
If mAutmoatico Then ' mAutmoatico is boolean defined as global var<br />
s_Sql = ""<br />
s_Sql = "Select .....<br />
s_Sql = s_Sql & "From ...."<br />
s_Sql = "Where ...."<br />
set o_rs = DBConnect.Execute(s_Sql)<br />
....<br />
End If
For some miraculous reason mAutmoatico is always false when reach the above If
Enjoy.
Habetis bona deum
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DoomedOne wrote: For some miraculous reason mAutmoatico is always false when reach the above If
Good thing, too. 'Cause I don't think the sql is going to work very well. It will only have a where clause in it.
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DoomedOne wrote: old VB6 app that we need to "upgrade"
I dont think VB6 has an upgrade path
xacc.ideIronScheme a R5RS-compliant Scheme on the DLR
The rule of three: "The first time you notice something that might repeat, don't generalize it. The second time the situation occurs, develop in a similar fashion -- possibly even copy/paste -- but don't generalize yet. On the third time, look to generalize the approach."
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He could always move on to VB6's offspring. It has already surpassed its parent!
ROFLOLMFAO
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leppie wrote: I dont think VB6 has an upgrade path
Yes it has - it's called the Recycle Bin.
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Pete O'Hanlon wrote: I dont think VB6 has an upgrade path
Yes it has - it's called the Recycle Bin.
Sweet
"Real programmers just throw a bunch of 1s and 0s at the computer to see what sticks" - Pete O'Hanlon
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Impeccable, Unfailing, Trusted Upgradepath for VB.
Vasudevan Deepak Kumar
Personal Homepage Tech Gossips
A pessimist sees only the dark side of the clouds, and mopes; a philosopher sees both sides, and shrugs; an optimist doesn't see the clouds at all - he's walking on them. --Leonard Louis Levinson
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void set_ptList(int len, int *start)<br />
{<br />
int i, z, l;<br />
<br />
i = 0;<br />
z = 0;<br />
<br />
while (i < len)<br />
{<br />
<br />
if (new_settings[3][i] != act_settings[3][i])<br />
{<br />
if (i < (len-1))<br />
{<br />
if (new_settings[3][i] > act_settings[3][i+1])<br />
{<br />
i++;<br />
z++;<br />
}<br />
else<br />
{<br />
for (l = i; l >= i-z; l--)<br />
{<br />
list[*start][0] = 3;<br />
list[*start][1] = l;<br />
(*start)++;<br />
}<br />
z = 0;<br />
i++;<br />
}<br />
}<br />
else<br />
{<br />
l = i;<br />
i++;<br />
while (z >= 0)<br />
{<br />
list[*start][0] = 3;<br />
list[*start][1] = l;<br />
(*start)++;<br />
z--;<br />
l--;<br />
}<br />
}<br />
}<br />
else<br />
{<br />
i++;<br />
}<br />
}<br />
<br />
}<br />
<br />
Have a nice life!!
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Looks some kind of sort method to me :P
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it shows there is no need for obfuscators in the modern toolbox.
Luc Pattyn [Forum Guidelines] [My Articles]
this months tips:
- before you ask a question here, search CodeProject, then Google
- the quality and detail of your question reflects on the effectiveness of the help you are likely to get
- use PRE tags to preserve formatting when showing multi-line code snippets
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Apparently this code generates a list of reversed ordered blocks of indexes where the new_settings and acc_settings differ, separating the block in the items where the value in new_settings is > the next item in acc_settings.
I guess...
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Surrender!!! You wrote it.
Greetings from Germany
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Quick n Easy Obfuscation!
Search for the regular expression
// {.*}
and replace with nothing at all.
(God help you if you use // anywhere in like, a file path).
Ninja (the Nerd)
Confused? You will be...
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