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There is no way to do that in C++, atleast that i know of.
C makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot; C++ makes it harder, but when you do, it blows away your whole leg
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Just a thought.
What if you create a class, encapsulating a variable of the desired type?
And then, using operator overloading, call a (class) function when the value changes?
Right out of my mind, I think it should work.
Thoughts, anyone?
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yes, it's a good solution, as you ask my thought.
but i still have a doubt about what the guy was asking, and i suspect him not to express himself correctly and not to want this...
anyway, as he doesn't give feedback...
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yes - and make the actual data private which force all access to happen through the methods.
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There is no standard way to do this. In MSVC you can use __declspec(property) to do it but note this is not portable.
Steve
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I compile a project(ATL dll based) in VS.NET 2005 under windows XP(sp2) and the build configuration is x64. The IDE will always perform a registration after project successfully compiled. This is the trouble, my machine is 32bit and target dll is 64bit, it always show an error:
Project: error PRJ0019: A tool returned an error code from "Performing
registration".
It is deservedly error for 64bit file can't register under 32bit windows.
how could i get the dll under 32bit windows? by config the project setting or something else??(Stop the perform registration action?)
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Hi!
I have dynamically created a CButton. How can I remove it totally (i mean it should not be visible anymore).
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Example
CButton *m_Button;
m_Button=new (CButton);
m_Button->Create("Butotn1",WS_CHILD|WS_VISIBLE|BS_NOTIFY,CRect(0,0,100,20),this,IDC_BUTTON1);
m_Button->DestroyWindow();
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Not sure but try
pButton->DestroyWindow()
and then
delete pButton;
should work
C makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot; C++ makes it harder, but when you do, it blows away your whole leg
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a CloseWindow() will take it off from screen.
VuNic
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another option that you can try is
MoveWindow(0,0,0,0);
this moves the window showing the same effect as if closing it.
Vision is Always important and so is your ATTITUDE.
Wishes.
Anshuman Dandekar
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this is howful solution, as it doesn't actually deletes the button but reduces its size to 0x0...
do you expect to have a 250Mo dialog box which only has 3 controls on it ?!
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hi all
i m using visuat stdio.net 2003 and mfc based applicaation.
following error occur in my application
debug assertion failed at atlsmptr.h at line 472
Expression (iChar>=0 && iChar <=GetLength())
it gives this error when i reach at this line marked by * during the debugging/executing.
asc=(int)m_strBarcodeValues[index].GetAt(1); * this line give error
where CString m_strBarcodeValues[91];
m_strBarcodeValues[32]=_T("011000100");//spacebar
asc=(int)m_strBarcodeValues[index].GetAt(0); works fine for this line
ddd
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tasleem143 wrote: (iChar>=0 && iChar <=GetLength())
Means that either you are requesting a char at a position which is less than 0 or greater than the maximun length of the string itself, post the actual code then we will know more
C makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot; C++ makes it harder, but when you do, it blows away your whole leg
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thanks for reply
actually i was not calling the function that that used to initilze that particular cstring array. thanks once again.
ddd
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Hello Tasleem
I am not getting y u r using an array of CString.
just declare an object of it as
CString str;
for (int i=0; i < somecondition ; ++i)
str.SetAt(i, somevalue);
I hope u got it.;)
By the way r u from Poona college.
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thanks for the reply.
no yar i had not seen poona even in my dreams. i m from islamabd, pakistan.
ddd
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Hello
I need some help with compiling some code. I need this for my class, and my C++ client isnt being to good to me.
I'm using MS Visual Studio 6.0
Visual C++ 6.0
And I'm trying to compile a bunch of data out to a text file. I can build the exe, but i cant run it (obviously). This error comes up:
"Cannot compile the file 'xxxxOUTPUT DIRECTORY.txt'; no compile tool is associated with the file extension."
Is there anything I can download, or any setting I can change? I'm really tight for time here, I got so much more to do and I'm stuck trying to fix this!
Any help is greatly appriciated!
Thanks
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roborappa69 wrote: Is there anything I can download
Yep download some brain
but seriously man, that didn't make any sense
C makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot; C++ makes it harder, but when you do, it blows away your whole leg
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Come on man. I'm in high school and this thing is due in one week, and I got alot to get through. I'm asking why does this error come up when I need to compile to a text file?
My textbook shows it printing to an output as a txt file. And When I go and hit Build to "Text1.txt" it comes up with that error.
Is there any tool I can download to associate the compiler with the txt extension, or is there any settings I can change to associate it?
Whats so complicated about that?
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Create a simple ATL project(dll),and then insert a simple ATL object into it!
Then add IShellExtInit and IContextMenu interface and associated functions, if you use the VC6(sp5) for compile, it work fine, but i use the VS.NET 2005, and it can't even compile, the errors are:
d:\workshop\Format.h(36) : error C2787: 'IContextMenu' : no GUID has been associated with this object
d:\workshop\Format.h(36) : error C2440: 'initializing' : cannot convert from 'DWORD_PTR' to 'const IID *' Conversion from integral type to pointer type requires reinterpret_cast, C-style cast or function-style cast
d:\workshop\Format.h(36) : error C2440: 'initializing' : cannot convert from 'ATL::_ATL_CREATORARGFUNC (__cdecl *)' to 'DWORD_PTR' There is no context in which this conversion is possible
What should i do to fix this problem?
Tomorrow may be not exciting, but the exciting tomorrow surely will come.
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VC6 and VS2005 are not compatiple
if you create a project in VS6 then it may or may not compile in VS2005 as the VS6 compiler was not "standards compliant"
C makes it easy to shoot yourself in the foot; C++ makes it harder, but when you do, it blows away your whole leg
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I am already fix it, thanks all the same for your help!
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I have a simple application in VC6.0 and ported it to .NET 2003.
I set "Use Managed Extensions" to Yes from the Project Properties->Configuration Properties->General because am using #using .
i get the foll error
Command line error D2016 : '/RTC1' and '/clr:initialappdomain' command-line
options are incompatible
i saw a lot of articles on this which suggested to do the foll to solve this error: i.e.
Open the project's Property Pages dialog box. For details, see Setting Visual C++ Project Properties.
Click the C/C++ folder.
Click the Code Generation property page.
Modify one or both of the following properties: Basic Runtime Checks or Smaller Type Check
i tried changing options under Basic Runtime Checks but to no avail?
i still get the error?
How can I solve this command line error?
Pls help!
Sincerely
Giftsana
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