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I've installed Visual Studio 2005 since few days and in trying to perform projects porting from Visual Studio 6.0.
I've always worked with Visual Studio 6.0 since now.
In Visual Studio 2005 I can't find something like MFC Class Wizard present in Visual Studio 6.0. Is there a tool in Visual Studio 2005 to be used to map windows messages and events, to add DDX variables, and all other things I can do with MFC Class Wizard in Visual Studio 6.0 directly with the sinple right click of the mouse ?
Thanks a lot !
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To add members just right click the class and use the popup menu. Events are in the "Properties" view.
led mike
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ilgale wrote: In Visual Studio 2005 I can't find something like MFC Class Wizard present in Visual Studio 6.0.
Seehere.
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
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I'd like to manage a "home made" data base completely in flat 'C. To be clear, not using (or interfacing with) any DBMS like ORACLE, MySQL, etc. .
The only functions I need are : Create an index, seek (according to a specific index), go to the first, last, next, previous record.
I do NOT need any kind of "query" manipulation (I will do it all programmatically).
What I'd like: a very light weigth library which I can call in flat 'C, free (if possible) or low cost (else).
hummm - nothing is better than an all dressed pizza
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What the hell is "flat C"?
If you mean you have access to only some old C compiler and not a C++ compiler you might just say so.
Either way C or C++ what you describe is just fundamental operations like file IO and sorting so why do you need some library to do this?
led mike
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led mike wrote: What the hell is "flat C"?
C Flat - also known as "B" (in music) - the predecessor to C
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ROTFL, that one was good !
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Mark Salsbery wrote: C Flat - also known as "B" (in music) - the predecessor to C
Does that mean that C# is really just D? Why didn't Microsoft keep the syntax the same as D then!?
If you decide to become a software engineer, you are signing up to have a 1/2" piece of silicon tell you exactly how stupid you really are for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week
Zac
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Zac Howland wrote: Does that mean that C# is really just D?
Oh no...C# was definitely the logical sequel to C.
Zac Howland wrote: Why didn't Microsoft keep the syntax the same as D then!?
You're kidding, right?
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Mark Salsbery wrote: You're kidding, right?
Only partially. D, D+, and D++ have been around for a while.
If you decide to become a software engineer, you are signing up to have a 1/2" piece of silicon tell you exactly how stupid you really are for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week
Zac
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Hello world for D.
D Language
My D++ link is dead. I appears that its features were merged back into D. I've never used either language, but I did run across them a couple years ago while doing some research for a company I use to work for.
If you decide to become a software engineer, you are signing up to have a 1/2" piece of silicon tell you exactly how stupid you really are for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week
Zac
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Cool I had no idea. Thanks for the links!
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And where does Brainfuck[^] come into all of this?
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what i understand of it is that data is written directly from the application into files (using C ?!), but not using database systems like MS SQL Server, Oracle or so...
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If you really need something that simple, you'd better write it,
that should not take long, and it will be exactly what you want.
If you want something a little more elaborate, why don't you look at
SQL-Server Desktop edition? It is free, and still preserves your
ability to scale up. If you want it really lightweight, you can
use the one with direct file access (no server).
My two cents.
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Sounds like all you want is a linked list. Why not just create your own? If you're looking for a database in C try SQLPLUS, though it may be a little more than what you want.
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Sounds like you need Berkeley DB[^] (these days owned and maintained by Oracle, but open source/free nevertheless)
--
Verletzen zerfetzen zersetzen zerstören
Doch es darf nicht mir gehören
Ich muss zerstören
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I did this once as a class exercise. The book that aided me in this endeavor was File Structures by Folk and Zoellick.
"Approved Workmen Are Not Ashamed" - 2 Timothy 2:15
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
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Might be overkill, but SQLite is a flat C library: http://www.sqlite.org/index.html[^]
Or try googling ISAM (Indexed Sequential Access Method), there's bound to be some free libs out there.
- S
50 cups of coffee and you know it's on!
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I have looked for such a thing and never found a free one. The closest and cheapest, alternative I've run across is:
http://www.mixsoftware.com/product/database.htm[^]
There is also: http://www.mghsoft.com/index.html[^].
I have used neither since I currently have no requirement to do so (almost did, which is why I found them.) I have used the following and was impressed with the caveats listed.
Slightly more expensive is http://www.codebase.com/[^]. Unfortunately, it hasn't been updated in years, doesn't support UNICODE (at least directly) and doesn't put all the data in one file.
Anyone who thinks he has a better idea of what's good for people than people do is a swine.
- P.J. O'Rourke
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Is it possible to transfer a file from a PC to a PDA via a serial connection. There appears to be plenty of code about that will work when connected via activesync but if possible I need to use the serial port. I have been looking at using the RAPI functions CECreateFile, CeReadFile, CeWriteFile etc. The applications on the PC and PDA will both be C++ apps.
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I want to add submenu in my menu
museek
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that's all you give us as a clue ?
what did you already write/tested ? can you use MFC's CMenu class ?
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Have you tried looking at the samples in MSDN?
If you decide to become a software engineer, you are signing up to have a 1/2" piece of silicon tell you exactly how stupid you really are for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week
Zac
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