Could it be that your typedef struct Color has been commented out?
Type: Posts; User: Ted
Could it be that your typedef struct Color has been commented out?
I know you think we are jerking you around, but RpiMatty is telling you the truth. A C struct or C++ class are the basis for your database. How you search, edit, add, or delete data entries...
Structured Query Language, a popular computer language used by home computer owners, small businesses, end users in large organizations, and programmers for database management.
the commas in your for loops should be semicolons. Compare your code to this:
int main()
{
char a[53] = "\0"; // input
char b[] = " JNuh88iNU67Jbn76n75hu767Bhg567b765mdsd4s";
...
Good news! Your loop parse errors are syntax errors. Take a
closer look. You also have a premature end main brace (}).
I'll let you find it.
hth,
If you would comment your code it would be easier to find your
errors. How you ever got this code to run is beyond me.
What is spawn and why is it undeclared?
I would create an array of pointers char *wordStrings[20].
Assuming a sentence is limited to no more than 20 words.
Parse the sentence assinging each word string to a pointer.
Than write a...
Hey, stop your griping.
You should indicate what errors you are getting. And document
your code better or I'll never hire you.
1. You ommited a semicolon in your header file; and,
2. You are...
I've used this in C++:
const char EJECT = 0x0c; // printer page eject command
ofstream print;
print.open( "LPT1" );
and this in C:
You have to study how Windows 2000 grabs the data to put in
the summary.
On the bottom of your screen click Start
Click on Help
Select the Index Tab
Enter "properties, file properties"
...
It's probably working, just not giving you the output you expect.
cout<<text[200]; \\this isn't working
your code will output the the contents of text[200] (which, by the
way, is out of...
Most operating systems (OS) don't do file management to the
level you are implying. To my knowledge, that is usually done
by the word processor and written in the DOC's header.
You can...
Not that I'm aware of. If your code is not too large, attach it and
I'll check it out and see what I can come up with.
Only other thing I can think of is your spelling of split.h vs. Split.h
or what not.
You need to include split.h in split.cpp
hth,
I think you might want another approach. Learn the basics first
than get advanced. However, you can review the following if
you think it will help.
CMap
template< class KEY, class...
The user does not name the structure, you do. The user only enters the required data and your program writes it to a (disk)
file for storage. The file is either developed as a sequential or random...
Every programming textbook includes a chapter on file processing.
It covers sequential and random access processing. If you don't
have a textbook or some other suitable How-To-Program book,
you...
Go to Amazon.com and search software - VC++.NET
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/B00005RV4X/qid%3D1021044454/ref%3Dsr%5F11%5F0%5F1/102-4965891-8591342
also search other software reviews...
You can write portable code that can be compiled for different machines. However, not all machines speak the same machine language. The different compilers are targeted toward specific operating...
Ok, here's your clue complements of the MSDN Library:
Compiler Error C2593
'operator identifier' is ambiguous
More than one possible operator was defined for the specified overloaded operator....
Your add_node() and your buildTree() logic is out of whack.
Follow my psuedo code. Normally your inout data will be read
from a file or from the keyboard. Call insertNode( treeType *,
keyType...
It seems that the first node is the only node in your tree.
You don't seem to be moving any pointers.
Try not to batch process your tree. insert yor nodes one at a time.
You need to first write...
I don't think your problem is with heap management.
Rather pointer management seems to be the problem.
You declare these global pointers without initializing them to null:
>>sTest *test1,...
Yes, you have a type mismatch in your prototype, and your function definition specifies a multiple-subscripted array. Other than the first subscript, the size is required for all subsequent...