|
Could you please tell me if there is any easy way to do this?
the problem is: I have a dialog, which have 14 radio buttons and 14 edit boxes. The 14 radio buttons are grouped and have an int m_nRadio assigned to it. Each radio button has an edit box to its right, and each edit box has a CString variable associated with them, they are named as m_edit0, m_edit1, m_edit2, ..... , m_edit13.
now, when user press a button on the dialog, I want to get the contents of the edit box next to the selected radio button, that is:
if ( m_nRadio == 0 ), I want contents of m_edit0;
if ( m_nRadio == 1 ), I want contents of m_edit1;
What I can think of now is using a 14 cases switch statement, which is clumsy, and stupid. Is there any good way to do this?
Thank you very much for any input!
|
|
|
|
|
Well, I can think of 2 solutions. The first would be to make your edit variables an array. But I think that would cause MFC's automated dialog junk to get very confused. Another option would be to create an array of pointers and initialize it with the address of each edit field. Then you can still use the MFC automation junk while being able to get the proper edit field using an index.
There really isn't a good clean way of doing it that I know of.
Tim Smith
I know what you're thinking punk, you're thinking did he spell check this document? Well, to tell you the truth I kinda forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this here's CodeProject, the most powerful forums in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question, Do I feel lucky? Well do ya punk?
|
|
|
|
|
Hi Tim, I tried the second option. Besides the chunk of repeated coding to initialize the array of pointers, it works like whoosh. One thing for sure is it is much better than my switch-case option.
Thank you!
|
|
|
|
|
One of the options is to assign sequential control IDs to edit boxes and use GetDlgItemText(IDC_EDIT_BASE_ID + m_nRadio, strEditContent).
I have no idea what kind of UI you're having, but maybe one edit would be enough? Just an idea
Tomasz Sowinski -- http://www.shooltz.com
- It's for protection - Protection from what? Zee Germans?
|
|
|
|
|
|
That will work great as long as the resource IDs are sequential.
Tim Smith
I know what you're thinking punk, you're thinking did he spell check this document? Well, to tell you the truth I kinda forgot myself in all this excitement. But being this here's CodeProject, the most powerful forums in the world and would blow your head clean off, you've got to ask yourself one question, Do I feel lucky? Well do ya punk?
|
|
|
|
|
Yes, HOW to use it??
How to add controls to each tab???
------------------------------------
Rickard Andersson, Suza Computing
ICQ#: 50302279
I'm from the winter country SWEDEN!
------------------------------------
|
|
|
|
|
|
how can i give a a value more than 32700 to an integer
i tried long int,unsigned long but all of these doenst work
my code is:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <conio.h>
int a,b,c,max,min,av;
void main() {
clrscr();
printf("1.number:");
scanf("%d",&a);
printf("2.number:");
scanf("%d",&b);
printf("3.number:");
scanf("%d",&c);
//------------------------max number
if(a>b && a>c)
max=a;
else if(b>a && b>c)
max=b;
else
max=c;
//---------------------min number
if(a
|
|
|
|
|
An unsigned long can hold numbers from 0 to 4,294,967,295. ints can hold values from –2,147,483,648 to 2,147,483,647.*
* Actually, this is platform dependent, so this may not be true in your case.
Anonymous wrote:
if(a min=a;
You're missing a closing paren.
Anonymous wrote:
else if(b min=b;
Same here.
What platform are you using to compile and run this program? What error(s) are you getting when you compile this? run this?
Jon Sagara
There is no spoon.
Best Miniputt score: 21
Sonork ID: 100.9999 jonsagara
|
|
|
|
|
By your use of clrscr(), you're compiling on a possibly 16 bit platform/compiler? If so, it may be that you need to scanf(%u,...) to input an unsigned integer.
|
|
|
|
|
How do I create a template that takes a member function as a parameter?
Here's what I'm trying to do
<pre>
void MyClass::DoSomething(int x)
{
}
MyClass::blah()
{
foo<MyClass>(DoSomething);
}
</pre>
<pre>
????
template <class C>
void foo(FunctionPointer fp)
{
int x = 0;
for (int i=0; i<10; i++)
{
fp(x);
}
}
</pre>
<b>Todd Smith
CPUA 0x007 ... shaken not stirred</b>
|
|
|
|
|
Google for 'functors' and you should hit it.
(Boy, hows that for a detailed response! )
|
|
|
|
|
That landed me in boost territory. It was a little daunting at first but here's what I came up with.
#include "stdafx.h"
#include <boost bind.hpp="">
#include "debugstr.h"
class CTest
{
public:
void Test(const char* str)
{
printf("member function: %s", str);
}
};
template <class f="">
void foo(F f)
{
for (int i=0; i<10; i++)
{
char buf[128] = {0};
sprintf(buf, "test %i\n", i);
f(buf);
}
}
void Test(const char* str)
{
printf("global function: %s", str);
}
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
CTest test;
foo(boost::bind(&CTest::Test, boost::ref(test), _1));
foo(boost::bind(Test, _1));
return 0;
}
Todd Smith
CPUA 0x007 ... shaken not stirred
|
|
|
|
|
It is doable, but it is not correct unless your member function is a staic one. Why do not pass pointer to that class as a parameter to foo() and inside foo() call p->DoSomething()
soptest
|
|
|
|
|
Well if you can keep the same parameters for the function then this might work
template <typename T>
class FunctionPointer {
typedef void (T::*FuncPtr)(int);
FunctionPointer( T* src, FuncPtr func ):m_source( src ), m_func(func) {};
void doit( int x ) {
(m_source->*m_func)(x)
}
FuncPtr m_func;
T* m_source;
};
template <typename T>
void foo(FunctionPointer<T> fp )
{
int x = 0;
for (int i=0; i<10; i++) {
fp.doit(x);
}
}
MyClass::blah()
{
foo( FunctionPointer<MyClass>(this, DoSomething) );
}
would this work ?
|
|
|
|
|
Hi All,
I'm deriving a view class from the CHtmlView, and sticking this in a child frame window of an MDI app. Anyway, I've got a toolbar with a forward and backward arrow for going forward and backward through the CHtmlView's history list. Going forward and back is simple enough (through CHtmlView::GoForward, and CHtmlView::GoBack), but how can I determine if there are previous entries or next entries in the history list of the browser from the current page? What I need is something like a CanGoBack or a CanGoForward method so I can update the buttons on the toolbar in the CmdUI handler.
Thanks,
Aaron
|
|
|
|
|
keybord event can generate a keystroke ,but how do you direct this keystroke to a particular window or its message queue.
|
|
|
|
|
I posted this a while back, and have been meaning to clean it up and offer it to the god of FAQ - maybe it will help.
|
|
|
|
|
I am sorry,I could not locate anything on 'this' link.
|
|
|
|
|
Ok - here is the example I posted, which should be made into a SendKeys type function. Here I hardcoded a known window handle - (Calculator).
Basically, the trick is to post messages for keydown and keyup, and its nice to format the lparam properly.
#include "stdafx.h"
#include "crtdbg.h"
#include "conio.h"
#include "windows.h"
#include "winbase.h"
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
HWND hwnd = (HWND) 0x025c;
INT Vk;
INT Scan;
CHAR character[2];
CHAR oemchar[2];
CHAR ch;
do {
while(!_kbhit());
ch = getch();
character[0]=ch;
character[1]='\0';
Vk = VkKeyScan(character[0]) & 0xFF;
CharToOem(character, oemchar);
Scan = OemKeyScan(oemchar[0]) & 0xFF;
printf("Key = %c, VK code = %d, scan = %d\n", ch, Vk, Scan);
UINT lKeydata = 0;
UINT mask = 1;
lKeydata |= mask;
lKeydata |= Scan << 15;
::PostMessage(hwnd, WM_KEYDOWN, Vk, lKeydata);
lKeydata |= mask;
lKeydata |= Scan << 15;
lKeydata |= mask << 31;
::PostMessage(hwnd, WM_KEYUP, Vk, lKeydata);
}
while(1);
return 0;
}
|
|
|
|
|
thanks!! it is a great help
|
|
|
|
|
Hi everybody,
Is ther a way [read: a program] to find out what functions a dll is exporting? Is there a tool with MVS that can do this?
To learn more about this I chose the default implementation of a sample dll in VC++: New->Projects->Win32 dynamic link-library.
Now, there's a test function called fnDllTest (my project is called DllTest) which is exported like this:
__declspec(dllexport) int fnDllTest(void)
{
return 42;
}
Now, I created a simple console application which should call this dll function. I loaded the dll using LoadLibrary and that works fine... BUT, now I wish to get the function fnDllTest through the use of GetProcAddress but I can't seem to get it working!
If the dll and the console app loading the dll are residing in the same place then the call to GetProcAddress should look like this right?
blabla = (blabla)GetProcAddress(libPtr, "fnDllTest");
where libPtr is the return value of LoadLibrary... What kind of type should blabla be of?
I haven't found any documentation on how to call dll exported functions...
Thx for all your help,
/Tommy
|
|
|
|
|
find the tool called DUMPBIN. it will tell you the function names. i'm not sure if it can tell you the params, tho.
-c
Smaller Animals Software, Inc.
Few things are harder to put up with than the annoyance of a good example.
Mark Twain
|
|
|
|
|
Thx!
I tried and this was the result:
...
ordinal hint RVA name
1 0 0000100A ?fnDllTest@@YAHXZ
...
What does this tell me? I can't very likely do like this, or...?
... GetProcAddress(libPtr, "?fnDllTest@@YAHXZ");
I mean, there must be a way for me to know what the exporting function name will look like when it is me writing them...?
THx for your help!
/Tommy
|
|
|
|
|