Hi,
I have a code that is compiled in C and I need to link in C++ object
files. I need to know if C++ object files created with a C++ compiler
can be linked with C object files created with the C compiler.
I have never attempted this. I have either written the entire project in
C or C++. I ha
Jason,
I'm not sure what you are asking here.
It appears that you can do system dump of the internal state of the
game. In which case the answer is yes.
A programmer plans his memory space when a program is written. Every
address in RAM space has a specific variable. The heap (stack) is
loca
They told me to go to the compiler writer newsgroup.
This isn't it?
Ray
Mike Stump wrote:
On Jan 26, 2007, at 3:54 PM, Ray Hurst wrote:
I have a code that is compiled in C and I need to link in C++ object
files. I need to know if C++ object files created with a C++ compiler
can be linked
:54PM -0800, Ray Hurst wrote:
They told me to go to the compiler writer newsgroup.
"They" told you wrong. You don't need a compiler writer to answer
basic C++ programming questions.
I think this was the answer I was looking for.
By the way, was this the correct place to post it?
Ray
Ferad Zyulkyarov wrote:
Hi,
If you want to phrase the question in terms of object file format and
linker issues, the answer is that the format is the same.
It's easy to see why: the compiler
Shouldn't the compiler error out here.
The statement: p = "" should have been p = '\0';
Or does the compiler treat them as equivalent.
It seems that only characters should be assigned to char's and strings
are illegal
Ray
Richard Guenther wrote:
On 1/28/07, Denis Vlasenko <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>