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  • why do you write tests and what is a unit test and how does it differ other types of testing ?

    - by dfafa
    im curious as to know, why tests are written? why would bother writing it ? why not just compile and run the code or view it in your browser, click around and test out stuff. i mean i can understand, a crawler that checks your web app's functions....but why is tests written, maintained and treated as important as the main feature codes ? is it crucial to always write and use tests ?

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  • What's the easiest way to parse a string in C?

    - by Luca Matteis
    I have to parse this string in C: XFR 3 NS 207.46.106.118:1863 0 207.46.104.20:1863\r\n And be able to get the 207.46.106.118 part and 1863 part (the first ip address). I know I could go char by char and eventually find my way through it, but what's the easiest way to get this information, given that the IP address in the string could change to a different format (with less digits)?

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  • How do I fix my Unit Test to have global access to everything?

    - by SLC
    Usually when you add one (in Visual Basic), it pops up a message asking if you want to enable an option that lets the test access things like private methods etc. However, I am editing a solution that does not have this enabled. I'd like to enable it so my unit tests will work, but I can't find the setting. Can anyone tell me how to enable it after the project has been created?

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  • How do you return a string from a function correctly in Dynamic C?

    - by aquanar
    I have a program I am trying to debug, but Dynamic C apparently treats strings differently than normal C does (well, character arrays, anyway). I have a function that I made to make an 8 character long (well, 10 to include the \0 ) string of 0s and 1s to show me the contents of an 8-bit char variable. (IE, I give it the number 13, it returns the string "0001101\0" ) When I use the code below, it prints out !{happy face] 6 times (well, the second one is the happy face alone for some reason), each return comes back as 0xDEAE or "!\x02. I thought it would dereference it and return the appropriate string, but it appears to just be sending the pointer and attempting to parse it. This may seem silly, but my experience was actually in C++ and Java, so going back to C brings up a few issues that were dealt with in later programming languages that I'm not entirely sure how to deal with (like the lack of string variables). How could I fix this code, or how would be a better way to do what I am trying to do (I thought maybe sending in a pointer to a character array and working on it from the function might work, but I thought I should ask to see if maybe I'm just trying to reinvent the wheel). Currently I have it set up like this: this is an excerpt from the main() display[0] = '\0'; for(i=0;i<6;i++) { sprintf(s, "%s ", *char_to_bits(buffer[i])); strcat(display, s); } DispStr(8,5, display); and this is the offending function: char *char_to_bits(char x) { char bits[16]; strcpy(bits,"00000000\0"); if (x & 0x01) bits[7]='1'; if (x & 0x02) bits[6]='1'; if (x & 0x04) bits[5]='1'; if (x & 0x08) bits[4]='1'; if (x & 0x10) bits[3]='1'; if (x & 0x20) bits[2]='1'; if (x & 0x40) bits[1]='1'; if (x & 0x80) bits[0]='1'; return bits; } and just for the sake of completion, the other function is used to output to the stdio window at a specific location: void DispStr(int x, int y, char *s) { x += 0x20; y += 0x20; printf ("\x1B=%c%c%s", x, y, s); }

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  • why isn't the input text file being read into the ArrayList<String>, diary?

    - by hmg
    Here's my code: public void readFile() throws IOException { System.out.println("Input file name: "); Scanner in = new Scanner(System.in); String readName = in.nextLine(); Scanner reader = new Scanner(new File(readName)); System.out.println("Reading file..."); while (reader.hasNextLine()) { System.out.println(reader.nextLine()); } System.out.println("File read."); Scanner inAgain = new Scanner(System.in); System.out.println("Would you like to read this into the current Diary?"); System.out.println("Warning: This will overwrite your current Diary!"); String readFileConfirm = inAgain.nextLine(); ArrayList<String> readData = new ArrayList<String>(); if (readFileConfirm.equalsIgnoreCase("yes")) { for (int i = 0; i < readData.size(); i++) { readData.add(reader.nextLine()); } System.out.println("Data added to extra array..."); System.out.println("Here are the contents."); for (int i = 0; i < readData.size(); i++) { System.out.println(readData.get(i)); } System.out.println("Contents read."); System.out.println("Now overwriting current Diary with read file..."); diary.clear(); for (int i = 0; i < diary.size(); i++) { diary.add(readData.get(i)); } System.out.println("New Diary created!"); System.out.println("Use 'recall' to see your new Diary!"); } else { System.out.println("Very well, returning to first command entry."); } } Thanks in advance! -h

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  • is there a way to compress a GET string so it won't be so long?

    - by sct
    I need to compress a string so it is shorter for a GET method form. Is there any way to compress a string and it will be decrypted later? That way... ?error=LOTS OF STUFFLOTS OF STUFFLOTS OF STUFFLOTS OF STUFFLOTS OF STUFF is shorter in some sort of key ?error=somekey so I can get back the result later. Not using MySQL preferably. Anyone know a good method for this?

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  • How to test if table was updated in Zend Framework?

    - by AD
    When user opens a form to modify a record, but instead of changing information, he just clicks the Update button. Which causes the update() function to return 0. However, I consider this case a valid update task. How would I test it, so I can assign a success message? Is update() returns -1 when SQL query failed or also 0? Method: Zend_Db_Table_Abstract::update() Any ideas? Thanks

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  • C++ - Is it possible to implement memory leak testing in a unit test?

    - by sevaxx
    I'm trying to implement unit testing for my code and I'm having a hard time doing it. Ideally I would like to test some classes not only for good functionality but also for proper memory allocation/deallocation. I wonder if this check can be done using a unit testing framework. I am using Visual Assert btw. I would love to see some sample code , if possible !

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  • Do you know of some performances test of the different ways to get thread local storage in C++?

    - by Vicente Botet Escriba
    I'm doing a library that makes extensive use of a thread local variable. Can you point to some benchmarks that test the performances of the different ways to get thread local variables in C++: C++0x thread_local variables compiler extension (Gcc __thread, ...) boost::threads_specific_ptr pthread Windows ... Does C++0x thread_local performs much better on the compilers providing it?

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  • How do I test the speed of a mySQL query?

    - by Chris
    I have a select and query like below... $sql = "SELECT * FROM notifications WHERE to_id='".$userid."' AND (alert_read != '1' OR user_read != '1') ORDER BY alert_time DESC"; $result = mysql_query($sql); how do I test how long the query took to run?

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  • How to host a RESTful C# webservice and test it.

    - by Debby
    Hi, I need to create a RESTful webservice in C#. This is what I have right now: namespace WebService { [ServiceContract] public interface IService { [OperationContract(Name="Add")] [WebGet(UriTemplate = "/")] int Add(); } public class Service:IService { public int Add() { // do some calculations and return result return res; } } } Now, my question is How do i host this service at a location say (http://localhost/TestService) and how can i test the service in console application client?

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  • Is a string formatter that pulls variables from its calling scope bad practice?

    - by Eric
    I have some code that does an awful lot of string formatting, Often, I end up with code along the lines of: "...".format(x=x, y=y, z=z, foo=foo, ...) Where I'm trying to interpolate a large number of variables into a large string. Is there a good reason not to write a function like this that uses the inspect module to find variables to interpolate? import inspect def interpolate(s): return s.format(**inspect.currentframe().f_back.f_locals) def generateTheString(x): y = foo(x) z = x + y # more calculations go here return interpolate("{x}, {y}, {z}")

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