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 tooOriginally Posted by Ideswa
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 tooOriginally Posted by Ideswa
Then (IMO) it's as good as deprecated.Originally Posted by Daved
Good class architecture is not like a Swiss Army Knife; it should be more like a well balanced throwing knife.
- Mike McShaffry
Luckily it's not that much work, because my sources aren't > 1000 lines yet!
Operating Systems:
- Ubuntu 9.04
- XP
Compiler: gcc
I'll buy it.Originally Posted by Daved
Sent from my iPadŽ
>> 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 changetoyou're using depreciated libraries?andyou're using deprecated libraries?tothe distinction is worth noting.the distinction is worth nothing.
Sent from my iPadŽ