I have written a program which uses a pid to check if the process is currently running and return a value based on the system call result.But the program core dumps
Code:
#include <stdio.h> #include <string.h int main( argc, argv ) int argc; char * argv[]; { int p_pid = 99; char buff[1000]; }
[code]....
What is the mistake in this code and is it portable in both unix/linux , is the method secure (grepping for program name )?
since I didn't know how to type epsilon symbol temporarily I am using ^
char prod[20][20],T[20],NT[20],c[10][10],foll[10][10],fir[10][10]; int tt,tnt,tp,a; int follow[20][20],first[20][20]; void first_of(char); int count(int j); void rhs(int j);
Code: class A { public: virtual void foo(){} }; class B : public A {
[Code] ....
Obviously when you call pA->foo, it will call foo defined in B. But foo defined in B is private. It is not supposed to be called outside the class B. So it looks like virtual breaks encapsulation.
i created a windows service that will run another program. but the program i want to run has a gui and i don't want the gui to be visible, i just want the program to run in the background.
But i have to do it without editing the gui program
i tested this code with notepad and it runs notepad in the background without displaying the window but when i try run my program it doesn't work. i don't know why its works for one program and not the other..
I'm working the 4th problem in chapter 14 of the Jumping into C++ book. In the book, he gives an example program for dynamically resizing an array while the program is running. It works fine for integer types but i need to do the same with a string type array. Right now my program is crashing because the string array is not resizing itself. Here's the part of the code im trying to figure out. The part for the int array has been ignored using // since it works fine and I'm trying to figure out whats wrong with the string array.
Code: #include <iostream> #include <string> //Write a program that lets users keep track of the last time they talked to each of their friends. //Users should be able to add new friends (as many as they want!) and store the number of days ago
The assignment is to write a program that statistically computes similarity of C syntax with another program; a same and a different. The one used here is in C language, it's called Battleship.cpp. The program must open a file and read line by line for keywords and then produce statistics. The reason my code is not running is the fopen function is failing and it goes to return -1. I am using MS Visual Studio 2013 and there are no compiler errors after turning off deprecation. I do see, however, this error UMEngx86.dll'. Cannot find or open the PDB file. The file being opened is in my source folder.
The program is not showing my full menu just the 0 Exit and the last line of text. This is the full main source file (not implementation file or header file).
I am working on a code and first i need to initialize the array depending on the size (min size 3x3, maximum size 9x9). The initialized array will descend in order. Note that it seems like a simple code and seems to work for any size from 3x3 to 7x7, but for some reason i get a strange output in the last few rows for 8x8 and 9x9. Not sure why. The second part to my problem is the very last digit of 0. I did hard code to define it but i would like to make it a character like an underscore...what is the easy way to do this?
* Implements the Game of Fifteen (generalized to d x d). * * Usage: ./fifteen d * * whereby the board's dimensions are to be d x d, * where d must be in [MIN,MAX] * * Note that usleep is obsolete, but it offers more granularity tha sleep and is simpler to use than nanosleep; `man usleep` for more.
I have a class which dynamically allocates memory for three data arrays, and as such in the destructor I told it to delete those data arrays.
However, when I've created a new class, and inherited the previous class - it will always crash AFTER running the program, unless I don't have the previous destructor present.
I keep getting the same error messages every time on Visual Studio. I don't know where the error is originating. Basically I'm trying to convert an infix expression (A+B-C) to a postfix expression (AB+C-) using stacks.
I'm trying to make a percentage counter inside a loop, printing each completed percent of the loop as it goes. I've managed to write such code, but when I run it the percentage output breaks down (becomes negative!) for large loops. I have an example below.
Code: #include <iostream> #include <sstream> #include <string> #include <stdlib.h> #include <stdio.h> using namespace std ; int main() {
[code].....
Compiling and running the above yields the output:
when i uncomment statements in the following ,it works perfectly fine for infix to postfix conversion.although comments are simple cout statements,, execution with cout statements as comments breaks in b/w.I have found this particularly with a^b-c.DevCPP is also showing similar behavior. I can't understand what's going on.I am working on code blocks.
#include<iostream> #include<cstdio> #include<conio.h> using namespace std; char stk[15];
Code: Enter your desired monthly salary: $2000___ Gee! $2000.00 a month is $24000.00 a year. Instead, it printed out: Code: Enter your desired monthly salary: $2000___
Gee! $2000.00 a month is $24000.00 a year. I don't understand how it got the extra nextline in the middle.
Here is the code:
Code:
#include <stdio.h> int main(void) { float salary; printf("aEnter your desired monthly salary:");
p6.c.text+0x6a): undefined reference to 'palindromeness' collect2: 1d returned 1 exit status
This is program is suppose to check if a phrase is a palindrome or not.I need to write a function definition for _Bool palindromeness(char str[])but I am having a tough time figuring that part out. I am brand new to programming..this is my first class and I am just learning arrays and pointers.