C++ :: Print All Usernames After Registering With Text
Oct 28, 2013
this is my code, the program has to ask for the number of usernames I want to create, then you type the username and password. after you do it 4 times (maximum) it prints (make a button to print the list) the username and password of each
I want to make a program that opens a text file and checks the usernames listed in the text files to see if the names are registered on a site such as twitter. How easy would this be to make, what things would I need to know?
In a C++ project, I need to call a C# created COM object (as a .dll)
Is there a way to use such a COM object without having it be registered in the registry?
The C# COM dll is just a "go between" our C++ code and a .NET library, there's no "COM contract" of any kind, the COM interfaces change each version. The fact it's COM and needs registration is annoying because it makes it hard to have multiple versions of our software installed (needed under some circumstances) and running at the same time.
I'd like a way to not have any registration at all. And just be able to do a LoadLibrary("c:TheRightPathcom.dll") of the right dll and then get going from there.
I want to build a library using c++ which will serve as an abstraction layer between applications and low-level process. The library will provide some APIs for the applications for some purposes.
For example the low-level process, may send an indication to the library i.e. raise an event, and the library in turns send it to all the applications, which have their registered callbacks to this library.
Any example for the previous scenario in c++ using boost library or the standard library will be perfect in Linux environment? The example that I want is: Generate event from a process and pass it to the library, then let an application register callback to the library.
Initially I know in Linux, I may use signal to send events, but my plan is to have a something more general not tighten to a specific OS.
The following code it taken from msdn library but it is failing to compile.
the following code has a header where all the variables used here are stored in header App.h.
The following lines are giving trouble:
Code: DialogBox(pApp->getInstance(), MAKEINTRESOURCE(IDD_ABOUTBOX), hWnd, pApp->About); error: 'App::About': function call missing argument list; use '&App::About' to create a pointer to member
Code: wcex.lpfnWndProc= &App::WndProc; error: '=' : cannot convert from 'LRESULT (__stdcall App::* )(HWND,UINT,WPARAM,LPARAM)' to 'WNDPROC'
There is no context in which this conversion is possible
I have created a Namespace Extension (I hope so) by creating a ATL Project with MFC support as dll in Visual Studio 2010.
Now I have a Implementation of IShellFolder:
Code: // ILCShellFolder.h: Deklaration von CILCShellFolder #pragma once #include "resource.h" // Hauptsymbole #include "NewNSE_i.h" #if defined(_WIN32_WCE) && !defined(_CE_DCOM) && !defined(_CE_ALLOW_SINGLE_THREADED_OBJECTS_IN_MTA)
[Code] ....
Not any of those IShellFolder Methods is being called... When I attach the explorer.exe process (which I know I can use to debug on other projects, just in case to exclude errors) it tells me that the DLL is not loaded by the explorer.exe process.
I'm writing a program that needs to parse executable files. I've got an "executable" base-class, and currently an "elf" class which inherits from it for parsing ELF files, and I will add more parsers (COM, MZ, PE, a.out, MACH-O, whatever) later on.
I want the program to automatically detect which kind of executable it's loading at runtime. It should be easy because every executable format I'm aware of/plan to support starts with a magic number. But because I can't have the parsers not check the file type (what if I re-use the code?), and I don't want to check each file twice (not just for performance, but also because only the ELF parser should know that ELF files start with "x7fELF", etc.) so I've come up with a pretty lazy solution: just try to parse the file with each known parser and have them throw an exception ("exe_type_error") if they can't parse it. If that exception gets thrown, try the next parser; if not, stop.
The remaining problem is how, at runtime, my program will know what parsers are available. I don't want to hard-code it in the main function; instead, I'd like the parsers to "register" themselves as available. That way, if I decide to go down the route of adding new parsers via dynamic linking, I will only have to add an API for dynamic libraries to register their parser, without recompiling any of the main program's code. I also want to do the same thing for another key part of the program (it's a static executable optimizer; it will run a series of "tests" (e.g. "is xor eax, eax faster than mov eax, 0 on this machine?") and optimizations ("if yes, change all mov eax, 0 to xor eax, eax") and I want to load those at runtime too).
I am having a problem using fprintf. I have a function which flips a coin. Heads prints a text to the screen. Tails prints a different text to the screen. My problem is getting the result to print to a text file.
Code:
#include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include<time.h> void seedrnd(void); int coinflip(int small, int large); }
I'm attempting to print a series of text from this loop, but for some reason all I am getting is the sum total and the number 1, like this
1 5175.11
When I want to get it for each iteration of the loop. I've cycled over this and compared it to my other loops I've used and I'm lost as to why this isn't working. I also tried using a do while but that didn't work as well.
I've created a text file with the numbers from 1-450. After writing code to retrieve and print out the contents in the text file, the compiler only printed out the numbers 124-450. Is there a reason why this is happening?
I am having trouble in reading data from my text file and print it out exactly like how it looks like in the text file. The problem im having is it will not read the last y Coordinates of the point. it keep reading the second last point for y coordinates which is wrong.
my text file is 0.0 0.0 0.0 1.0 1.0 0.0(but it read until here) 0.0 0.0(suppose to read the last point which is here)
For your information, this is my 1st year degree assignment in C programming. It is to create a program which can read text file (manually create) and print it out in a program and calculate the area for the polygon using ADT function ( .c and .h files)
*This is the code for my read file function*
Basically this accepts a Polygon and a file pointer as parameters. It reads the polygon point data from the file, pass the read data to plg_new() to create a new Polygon and returns the new Polygon created.
Code:
polygon *plg_read(polygon *New_polygon, FILE *Coord) { int i; int numberofvertices=0; int count=0; char filename[50]; double xCoor[50], yCoor[50];
[Code]....
This is the second function my polygon new code. This ADT function basically creates a new Polygon with malloc(), initialize all ADT data members with its parameter values and returns the Polygon.
I have written the following code but i am stuck. Write a program that will prompt the user for a file name and open that file for reading. Print out all the information in the file, numbering each new line of text.
Code: #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <conio.h> #include <ctype.h> int main() { char line[81], filename[21], c; int i = 1; FILE *inFile;
I have a text file where in each line is 3 words and 2 int type numbers. I'm doing search by word and I want to print out to the screen the whole line where that word was found (the words is repeated in some lines). My search looks like this:
Code: #include<iostream> #include<string> #include<fstream> #include<stdlib.h> #include <vector> using namespace std; int main(){ vector <string> words; string str, paieska;
I have to create a small data base for a shop. One of the functions i am creating is taking a customers ID and scanning that through a text file and to print out the info about that customer. What i am having trouble with is where do i insert the string compare in my program?
//declaring array for input of customer ID int customer_ID [20]; printf("Please enter the customer ID:"); gets( customer_ID ); //users input stored in the array
comparing with screen size the height is bigger but lenght is smaller. I don't understand.
I can understand that different printers process the fonts in different way and then to have different lenghts. That's not the problem. The problem is I need to simulate in screen the same behaviour i will have on printer because these texts are being aligned in the document, and I don't want to see that the text si aligned different in text than in paper.
What can I do to render the text on screen with the same size I will have on the printer? Print preview is doing it. Should I change the font parameters? is something related with pixels per inch?
I am making a program where the user enters numbers into an array and then a number,x. The array is sorted, then x is inserted into the appropriate place. I wrote my selection sort
Code:
void Sort(int ary[], int size) { int temp; int smallest; int current; int move; }
[code]....
put it wont print the numbers sorted when I use my print function, just the unsorted numbers.
I want to extract Text1, Text2, Text3, Text4,..., Text600 in the output file. How can i achieve this?
/* BTW, I am not getting my homework done here. I am an ex-programmer, who has now moved to marketing for some time now, and today, I encountered this problem, which I believe can be solved easily through programming. */
i want to create 100 gmail accounts instantaneously....what i want from you guys is i have written a program that create a text file i want that once i give the program the imput of 1 it should delete the first 3 lines from the file i.e. the first account details coz that is already been created and shift the rest of it 3 lines upwards after that i'll write a javascript that will automatically fill and create the accounts with those names in web browser.....my lil program is here:
Program that reads in a normal text file and converts it into mobile phone text. that is if the word is 3 characters or less then ther is no changes to the word and if the word is four or more letters then remove all the vowels from the word except for vowels that are capitals.