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  • What is the future of C++?

    - by George Edison
    Given the rise in popularity of C# and others, (which you can point out in the comments) what future does C++ have? Consider that most OS code is a mix of Asm/C/C++ and a lot of FOSS still use it. Also consider the upcoming C++0x standard that brings a few changes to the mix.

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  • Heap Behavior in C++

    - by wowus
    Is there anything wrong with the optimization of overloading the global operator new to round up all allocations to the next power of two? Theoretically, this would lower fragmentation at the cost of higher worst-case memory consumption, but does the OS already have redundant behavior with this technique, or does it do its best to conserve memory? Basically, given that memory usage isn't as much of an issue as performance, should I do this?

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  • Most suitable Unix platform for developing device drivers

    - by bugspy.net
    I completely newbie in device drivers, so I hope my question is in place, but I need to develop a driver to control some equipment. I was thinking on using Linux as the host OS, but not sure if it is such good idea. I've heard some horror stories about the mess of developing device drivers under Linux. Is there a better alternative under the *Nix world? Or maybe should I check other OSes?

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  • Ant variable does not exists in Ubuntu 10.10

    - by Nishat Baig
    I am trying to set up ANT build. However when I invoke build command helloworld_15/${NAME} does not exist. BUILD FAILED (total time: 0 seconds) Also the configure variables does not seems to be assigned. However i have set them into /etc/envitonment I tried echo $<varaiable_name> and value get displayed. Tried to google but not solutions seems am the first one having this issue. PS: OS Ubuntu 10.10

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  • How do I upload a file when I know the client's filepath?

    - by GJTorikian
    I'm interested in the way Sonic Living detects your iTunes library XML file. It prompts the user to approve its actions, then automatically uploads the XML file based on the client OS (and assuming the default installation path of iTunes). How the heck does it do that? None of the upload libraries I've looked at have this feature. They all assume that a user will click "Select file..." then browse around for the right thing to upload.

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  • Sending tweets using Android

    - by Saranya.R
    I want to send a tweet from Android.I have executed the following code.But I am not bale to send any tweets.Avtually the button I created is not working.Can anybody tel me wats the prob? This is my code.. package samplecode.sampleapp.sampletwidgitpublicintent; import android.app.Activity; import android.content.ActivityNotFoundException; import android.content.Intent; import android.os.Bundle; import android.view.View; import android.view.View.OnClickListener; import android.widget.Button; import android.os.Bundle; public class TwidgitPublicIntent extends Activity implements OnClickListener { private static final int TWIDGIT_REQUEST_CODE = 2564; /** Called when the activity is first created. */ @Override public void onCreate(Bundle savedInstanceState) { super.onCreate(savedInstanceState); setContentView(R.layout.main); ((Button)findViewById(R.id.tweet_button)).setOnClickListener(this); ((Button)findViewById(R.id.mention_button)).setOnClickListener(this); ((Button)findViewById(R.id.retweet_button)).setOnClickListener(this); ((Button)findViewById(R.id.message_button)).setOnClickListener(this); } public void onClick(View v) { switch(v.getId()) { case R.id.tweet_button: // Standard tweet Intent tIntent = new Intent("com.disretrospect.twidgit.TWEET"); tIntent.putExtra("com.disretrospect.twidgit.extras.MESSAGE", "_message_in_here_"); try { this.startActivityForResult(tIntent, TWIDGIT_REQUEST_CODE); } catch (ActivityNotFoundException e) { // If Twidgit is not installed } break; case R.id.mention_button: // Mention Intent mIntent = new Intent("com.disretrospect.twidgit.MENTION"); mIntent.putExtra("com.disretrospect.twidgit.extras.TO", "_username_to_xmention_"); mIntent.putExtra("com.disretrospect.twidgit.extras.MESSAGE", "_message_in_here_"); try { this.startActivityForResult(mIntent, TWIDGIT_REQUEST_CODE); } catch (ActivityNotFoundException e) { // If Twidgit is not installed } break; case R.id.retweet_button: // Retweet a tweet Intent rtIntent = new Intent("com.disretrospect.twidgit.RETWEET"); rtIntent.putExtra("com.disretrospect.twidgit.extras.MESSAGE", "_message_in_here_"); rtIntent.putExtra("com.disretrospect.twidgit.extras.VIA", "_original_author_of_tweet_name_"); try { this.startActivityForResult(rtIntent, TWIDGIT_REQUEST_CODE); } catch (ActivityNotFoundException e) { // If Twidgit is not installed } break; case R.id.message_button: // Send DM Intent dmIntent = new Intent("com.disretrospect.twidgit.DIRECT_MESSAGE"); dmIntent.putExtra("com.disretrospect.twidgit.extras.TO", "_username_to_send_dm_to_"); dmIntent.putExtra("com.disretrospect.twidgit.extras.MESSAGE", "_message_in_here_"); try { this.startActivityForResult(dmIntent, TWIDGIT_REQUEST_CODE); } catch (ActivityNotFoundException e) { // If Twidgit is not installed } break; } } @Override protected void onActivityResult(int requestCode, int resultCode, Intent data) { super.onActivityResult(requestCode, resultCode, data); // Check result code if(resultCode == Activity.RESULT_OK) { // Check requestCode switch(requestCode) { case TWIDGIT_REQUEST_CODE: // Handle successful return break; } } else if(resultCode == Activity.RESULT_CANCELED){ // Handle canceled activity } } }

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  • How to make my laptop dual boot(Windows Server 2008 and WIndows 7)?

    - by Dinesh
    I have Windows Server 2008 R2 Enterprise(Licensed Copy) installed in my Laptop. I have installed this to evaluate Latest 64 bit Products of Microsoft like Share point 2010 etc. Now i want to install Windows 7 Ultimate(Original) without removing the Server OS. Basically, i want to make my laptop Dual Boot. I tried To install Windows 7, but it not showing any options for making dual boot. Can anybody,please suggest the solution. I need to install immediately.

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  • Linux directories

    - by Alex Farber
    I am writing installation script for my program, which is supposed to run on Linux/Unix OS. What is the default directory for the following files: Executable files (programs). Program should be executed by typing its name from the command line. Shared libraries. Third-party shared libraries (the program is not open source, so I need to redistribute third-party libraries). Read-only program configuration files for all users. Configuration data available for read/write access for all users.

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  • What is your single most favorite command-line trick using Bash?

    - by hoyhoy
    We all know how to use <ctrl>-R to reverse search through history, but did you know you can use <ctrl>-S to forward search if you set stty stop ""? Also, have you ever tried running bind -p to see all of your keyboard shortcuts listed? There are over 455 on Mac OS X by default. What is your single most favorite obscure trick, keyboard shortcut or shopt configuration using bash?

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  • WSDL vs DLL. Which is better?

    - by Lopper
    I would like to create a reusable interface to transfer some proprietary information over the TCP/IP connection. If given only the choice of either WSDL or DLL, what are the pros and cons of using each? This is assuming that Windows OS is used.

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  • Is there a way to efficiently yield every file in a directory containing millions of files?

    - by Josh Smeaton
    I'm aware of os.listdir, but as far as I can gather, that gets all the filenames in a directory into memory, and then returns the list. What I want, is a way to yield a filename, work on it, and then yield the next one, without reading them all into memory. Is there any way to do this? I worry about the case where filenames change, new files are added, and files are deleted using such a method. Some iterators prevent you from modifying the collection during iteration, essentially by taking a snapshot of the state of the collection at the beginning, and comparing that state on each move operation. If there is an iterator capable of yielding filenames from a path, does it raise an error if there are filesystem changes (add, remove, rename files within the iterated directory) which modify the collection? There could potentially be a few cases that could cause the iterator to fail, and it all depends on how the iterator maintains state. Using S.Lotts example: filea.txt fileb.txt filec.txt Iterator yields filea.txt. During processing, filea.txt is renamed to filey.txt and fileb.txt is renamed to filez.txt. When the iterator attempts to get the next file, if it were to use the filename filea.txt to find it's current position in order to find the next file and filea.txt is not there, what would happen? It may not be able to recover it's position in the collection. Similarly, if the iterator were to fetch fileb.txt when yielding filea.txt, it could look up the position of fileb.txt, fail, and produce an error. If the iterator instead was able to somehow maintain an index dir.get_file(0), then maintaining positional state would not be affected, but some files could be missed, as their indexes could be moved to an index 'behind' the iterator. This is all theoretical of course, since there appears to be no built-in (python) way of iterating over the files in a directory. There are some great answers below, however, that solve the problem by using queues and notifications. Edit: The OS of concern is Redhat. My use case is this: Process A is continuously writing files to a storage location. Process B (the one I'm writing), will be iterating over these files, doing some processing based on the filename, and moving the files to another location. Edit: Definition of valid: Adjective 1. Well grounded or justifiable, pertinent. (Sorry S.Lott, I couldn't resist). I've edited the paragraph in question above.

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  • How can i use a C# dll in a Win32 C++ project ?

    - by Agito
    I am working on a solution, most of its core engine is developed as Win32 C++ (and is Platform independent and is also used on OS X), some time ago we needed to call C++ dll's of core engine from C# and I was able to Load main solution's DLL in C# (by the help of some threads here on SO). but now we have certain things implemented in Managed C# dll and need to use it in Win32 C++ project? (and just function definitions and dll are provided)

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  • What are the implications of multi-tasking in iOS 4.0 for developers?

    - by MrDatabase
    I just watched this video from Apple that shows multi-tasking on the new iPhone (running iOS 4.0). What are the implications of multi-tasking to developers? Include both positives and negatives. For example what happens if the user decides to launch two resource-intensives apps at the same time, one of the apps crashes and progress in a game (for example) is lost. Should developers be considering this when writing apps for the new OS and phone?

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  • Possible to view PHP code of a website?

    - by Camran
    Is it possible to somehow view another websites php files/codes? Or to rephrase the question, Can my php codes be viewed by anybody except for those who have access to the file? If so, how cant I best prevent this? Thanks Ps: Server OS is Ubuntu 9.10 and PHP version is 5+ (Apache2)

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  • Windows development on a Mac Pro

    - by Frank
    Looking to do iphone, android, and possibly windows phone development on a Mac Pro. What are the pluses and minuses of using a Mac Pro and a dual boot. Unlike most, Windows 7 will be the primary OS since most supporting software will be done with Visual Studio 08/10 over the next year. I have found driver issues from a few years ago. Do any of these issues still exist?

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  • Reading binary file with Octave

    - by Anthony Blake
    I'm trying to a binary file consisting of floats with Octave (on OS X), but I'm getting the following error: octave-3.2.3:2> load Input.dat R -binary error: load: failed to read matrix from file `Input.dat' The file was written like so: std::ofstream fout("Input.dat", std::ios::trunc | std::ios::binary); fout.write(reinterpret_cast<char*>(Buf), N*sizeof(double)); fout.close(); Any idea what could be going wrong here?

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  • sys.path() and PYTHONPATH issues

    - by Justin
    I've been learning Python, I'm working in 2.7.3, and I'm trying to understand import statements. The documentation says that when you attempt to import a module, the interpreter will first search for one of the built-in modules. What is meant by a built-in module? Then, the documentation says that the interpreter searches in the directories listed by sys.path, and that sys.path is initialized from these sources: the directory containing the input script (or the current directory). PYTHONPATH (a list of directory names, with the same syntax as the shell variable PATH). the installation-dependent default. Here is a sample output of a sys.path command from my computer using python in command-line mode: (I deleted a few so that it wouldn't be huge) ['', '/usr/lib/python2.7', '/usr/lib/python2.7/lib-old', '/usr/lib/python2.7/lib-dynload', '/usr/local/lib/python2.7/dist-packages', '/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages', '/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/PIL', '/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/gst-0.10', '/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/gtk-2.0', '/usr/lib/pymodules/python2.7', '/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/ubuntuone-couch', '/usr/lib/python2.7/dist-packages/ubuntuone-storage-protocol'] Now, I'm assuming that the '' path refers to the directory containing the 'script', and so I figured the rest of them would be coming from my PYTHONPATH environmental variable. However, when I go to the terminal and type env, PYTHONPATH doesn't exist as an environmental variable. I also tried import os then os.environ, but I get the same output. Do I really not have a PYTHONPATH environmental variable? I don't believe I ever specifically defined a PYTHONPATH environmental variable, but I assumed that when I installed new packages they automatically altered that environment variable. If I don't have a PYTHONPATH, how is my sys.path getting populated? If I download new packages, how does Python know where to look for them if I don't have this PYTHONPATH variable? How do environment variables work? From what I understand, environment variables are specific to the process for which they are set, however, if I open multiple terminal windows and run env, they all display a number of identical variables, for example, PATH. I know there file locations for persistent environment variables, for example /etc/environment, which contains my PATH variable. Is it possible to tell where a persistent environment variable is stored? What is the recommended location for storing new persistent environment variables? How do environment variables actually work with say, the Python interpreter? The Python interpreter looks for PYTHONPATH, but how does it work at the nitty-gritty level?

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  • Destructors in C++

    - by user265260
    does the Destructor deallocate memory assigned to the object which it belongs to or is it just called so that it can perform some last minute housekeeping before the object os deallocated by the compiler?

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