This sounds like a missing-semi-colon-at-end-of-class-declaration problem.
Type: Posts; User: DrkMatter
This sounds like a missing-semi-colon-at-end-of-class-declaration problem.
I beg to differ. While practice most CERTAINLY is an important part of learning a language, without proper tutoring to show hidden, subversive pitfalls, you'll only go half the way through. It might...
Dummies should watch Football and Nascar, and make MySpace profiles. =P
C++ isn't meant for dummies. You'll do yourself (and everyone you might ask for help later on) a favor by getting...
Any compiler worth using is going to do such a calculation at compile time, and the only wasted CPU cycles will be during said compilation, not during the program execution.
Streams can send information into files, but they can also be directed toward in-memory buffers. If you wish to avoid using static storage, you could open an in-memory buffer stream, let your SDK...
You could store function pointers in a std::map, using characters as keys. While this wouldn't validate the num1 oper num2 syntax (Which is impossible, anyway), you could use...
Class members are declared thusly:
class Foo
{
public:
int myPublicMember;
private:
int myPrivateMember;
};
picBlocks is a local variable to your menuFile_Click function. To be able to access it in another function, you'll have to either pass it as an argument, or put it in place where it is visible to...