Dear forum.
I were making a dev C++ program which allows to send to someone specific file. But the code all was wrong.
Could I get help from some one who knows dev C++ better.
:confused:
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Dear forum.
I were making a dev C++ program which allows to send to someone specific file. But the code all was wrong.
Could I get help from some one who knows dev C++ better.
:confused:
post your code. explain what's wrong. ask specific questions.
Only that dev-c++ hasn't been maintained in the last decade (the last supported OS was win2K), so running it on XP/Vista/Win7/Win8/...... (I'm getting that TurboC obsolescent feeling again) is going to be increasingly unlikely and frustrating.
Pick something recent.
Visual Studio Express 2012 Products | Microsoft Visual Studio
smorgasbordet - Pelles C
Code::Blocks
Orwell Dev-C++ | Free Development software downloads at SourceForge.net (this is an updated fork of the original dev-c++, so you might like this the most)
If you can find a library which does it all for you, then it will be easy.
If you want to do all the work yourself, you need to read this -> http://www.ietf.org/rfc/rfc2821.txt
and get yourself settled in for a good month of coding.
There's always MinGW which includes the useful `make' utility. It's not so bad. For simple projects I start with a batch file like this
makeit.bat:
Then I can build either by double clicking or by typing `make run' at the command promptCode:@echo off
call "%userprofile%\bin\env-mingw.bat"
make main run
pause
Another trick is
Then Windows will assign P: to your project directory. This overcomes some of the limitations of the Windows command prompt.Code:subst p: "C:\Path\To\Some\Project\Directory"
Or you can use an IDE which typically have syntax highlighting, code completion and compiling with the press of a single button.
Seems like a better way to do coding.
I love how this kid just dumped the problem on us, and then ran away when the answer wasn't presented right away.