Swammerdami
Squadron Leader
Co-workers were mostly Berkeleyites and the default .cshrc they gave us beginners had a line
. . . alias vi ed
I see this makes no sense! The actual alias hidden in our default .cshrc's was
. . . alias ed ex
Co-workers were mostly Berkeleyites and the default .cshrc they gave us beginners had a line
. . . alias vi ed
You mean FORTRAN.When I my first class in software class, FORAN, I'd keypunch the cards, drop the deck off at the school computer center, and come back later for a printout,.
MS Visual Studio is very good. A lot of effort creating useful features.
I have one problem. x^y does not work and I can not figure out why. pow(x,y) works fine.
I looked on the net and found 1 report of a similar problem.
Well, there is power operator for x=2 and y=[0,1,2,3,....]MS Visual Studio is very good. A lot of effort creating useful features.
I have one problem. x^y does not work and I can not figure out why. pow(x,y) works fine.
I looked on the net and found 1 report of a similar problem.
There's no power operator in C/C++. x^y means bitwise XOR.
MS Visual Studio is very good. A lot of effort creating useful features.
I have one problem. x^y does not work and I can not figure out why. pow(x,y) works fine.
I looked on the net and found 1 report of a similar problem.
There's no power operator in C/C++. x^y means bitwise XOR.
VS stopped runni g todaty and I am locked out of the install directory but no worries.
Code Blocks is a better tool than Eclipse. It comes bundled with a compiler suite for FORTRAN, Python, and C/C++. A good tool if you want to learn C/C++ or if all you need is a console app. It will do everything I needed VS for, and it takes up a lot less room.
Eclipse appears to be an old tool. To zoom you have to use +- keys instead of the mouse.
VS stopped runni g todaty and I am locked out of the install directory but no worries.
Code Blocks is a better tool than Eclipse. It comes bundled with a compiler suite for FORTRAN, Python, and C/C++. A good tool if you want to learn C/C++ or if all you need is a console app. It will do everything I needed VS for, and it takes up a lot less room.
Eclipse appears to be an old tool. To zoom you have to use +- keys instead of the mouse.
Eh, I wouldn't necessarily conclude that a modern development tools is "old" if it prefers keyboard shortcuts to the mouse. The ideal for most software developers I know is to have a setup where you never touch the mouse. But yeah, Eclipse happens to be quite dated. If you are looking for an IDE for C, C++, I'd consider CLion from Intellij: https://www.jetbrains.com/clion/