That's why you should make frequent backups of your source files. Make a copy before you start making major changes just in case new changes don't work. I learned that the hard way too :oQuote:
Originally Posted by Ideswa
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That's why you should make frequent backups of your source files. Make a copy before you start making major changes just in case new changes don't work. I learned that the hard way too :oQuote:
Originally Posted by Ideswa
Then (IMO) it's as good as deprecated.Quote:
Originally Posted by Daved
Luckily it's not that much work, because my sources aren't > 1000 lines yet!
I'll buy it.Quote:
Originally Posted by Daved
>> Then (IMO) it's as good as deprecated.
There is an important difference. Deprecated means that it is still standardized and will still work on a standards compliant compiler. Non-standard means it might not. <stdio.h> is deprecated, <iostream.h> is non-standard. <stdio.h> works on VC++ 7.1, <iostream.h> does not. While many people don't know the difference, those who do will understand that non-standard is worse than deprecated and that the distinction is worth noting.
Funny how one letter can changetoQuote:
you're using depreciated libraries?
andQuote:
you're using deprecated libraries?
toQuote:
the distinction is worth noting.
Quote:
the distinction is worth nothing.