Hello Everyone,
If there is one esoteric programming language that you'd recommend someone to pick up (assume a C++/Perl background), which one would it be?
Arpan
What programming languages are a good choice for High Integrity Systems?
An example of a bad choice is Java as there is a considerable amount of code that is inaccessible to the programmer. I am looking for examples of strongly typed, block structured languages where the programmer is responsible for 100% of the code, and there is as little interference from things like a JVM as possible.
Compilers will obviously be an issue. Language must have a complete and unambiguous definition.
I have a quadcore processor and I would really like to take advantage of all those cores when I'm running quick simulations. The problem is I'm only familiar with the small Linux cluster we have in the lab and I'm using Vista at home.
What sort of things do I want to look into for multicore programming with C or Java? What is the lingo that I want to google?
Thanks for the help.
Hi,
I like using Visual Basic for C++. I'm a student
I noticed the web development feature in it, and I was wondering if it is any good for web design, maybe if someone has used it or does use it if they can give a few words on weather or not it's worth learning?
I have been using Dreamweaver as my platform for web design.
So pretty much I'm asking Dreamweaver VS Visual Studio for webdesign, pros and cons?
Someone told me to use MFC,but it seems that MFC will be dead,although its not already...
so if i want to learn windows programming now, which one should i choose? thx.
I'm learning functional programming with Clojure. What practical excersises can you recommend? Online repositories with solutions would be perfect.
One idea I can think of is going through all the popular algorithms on sorting, trees, graphs etc. and implementing them in Clojure myself. While it could work, it may be pretty steep and I'm likely to do it inefficiently (compared to someone who knows what she's doing).
What are some fun programming languages to learn and work with? I'm asking this for absolutely no practical purpose other than just to learn something new. So, what are some fun languages?
I already know Python and C# so those don't count (although Python would probably be the first language I'd recommend). I've spent some time with Ruby, but I don't really see anything that's a whole lot different from Python.
(and no, I'm not going to learn Intercal or Brainf*ck before you mention it)
I would like to use the task-list in Visual Studio but it really lacks almost any useful feature a task-list should provide. So I use Todo-List externally, to keep track of the things I need to get done. Would be nice to have it all in one place.
So does anyone know of a cool replacement Add-On for the tasklist in Visual Studio?
Thanks in advance!
Hello all,
I am working with Visual Studio (2008 edition) for the first time. Used to programming in a Unix environment, I have become quite used to cscope and vim. For my current project, I really need cscope. I was wondering if there is any way I could use cscope on Visual Studio - or use cscope in Windows. Or if there is another tool which does this job ..
Thanks
Rahul
Can anyone point to programming language which has python-like syntax, but from the very beginning was designed to generate native code? I'm aware of Boo only, but it uses .net, not native code generation. Well, if nothing else than python-like languages which generate .net/java bytecode are fine too.
I was wondering if anyone knew why some programming languages that I see most frequently spelled in all caps (like an acronym), are also commonly written in lower case. FORTRAN, LISP, and COBOL come to mind but I'm sure there are many more.
Perhaps there isn't any reason for this, but I'm curious to know if any of these changes are due to standards or decisions by their respective communities. Or are people just getting too lazy to hit the caps lock key? (I know I am)
Is there an website anywhere that allows you to select required facets of a programming language and then suggests matching options for you to choose from?
For example, say I wanted an object oriented language that was functional its would suggest F#, Python, etc.
I'm using Visual Studio 2008. I've added a control on a page but can't reference it in code-behind file. When I looked at the Code-Gen file, I didn't find my new control. It looks like Visual Studio didn't update Code Gen file to include my control. Is there a way to manually re-generate that Code Gen file?
When setting up a Setup Project in Visual Studio 2010 and even to I removing all the prerequistes .NET 4.0 is still required on the computer that runs the Installation. Deploying with ClickOnce works but is not an option, but at least it doesn't ask for .NET 4.0.
Is there a way to create a Setup Project in Visual Studio 2010 that doesn't require .NET 4.0 on installation?
Edit
This is one of the test configurations i've tested
And this is what it looks like when I run setup.exe or the .msi
There are a few buttons associated with the Output window in Visual Studio (VS2005/2008/2010). One of them is "Clear All Panes".
How can I install an event handler that's called when that button is clicked?
I'm building a Visual Studio extensibility package, working in C#.
Hi Folks, does it matter if we install .net framework & then visual studio or does visual studio comes with the framework ?
I know it's a basic question but i never thought of this honestly.
TIA
hi, i am creating ( researching possibility of ) a highly customizable python client and would like to allow users to actually edit the code in another language to customize the running of program. ( analogous to browser which itself coded in c/c++ and run another language html/js ). so my question is , is there any programming language implemented in pure python which i can see as a reference ( or use directly ? ) -- i need simple language ( simple statements and ifs can do )
Hi
I have Visual Studio test manager installed in my machine, I have TFS Server installed on another server, I want to connect to that TFS server with new VS 2010.
Do I need to install the Visual studio 2010 full version or just the test manager?
I installed test manager and its asking a URL to add and I added the one we already have , but its not connecting to that site.
Do I need to isntall Full version and TFS on same machine??
Please help
Thanks
I have an x64 managed C++ class that needs to be tested using Visual Studio 2008. This class links to a x64 unmanaged lib
I'm not able to run my my tests because vstesthost.exe (the exe Visual Studio hosts my test) is x86 and not x64.
Ideas? the error generated is
rror: System.BadImageFormatException: Could not load file or assembly ... or one of its dependencies. An attempt was made to load
I working as an IT consultant and I am currently doing functional stuff like requirements gathering, documentations and writing test specs etc.
I kind of sick of this kind of job scope and wish to do more programming/ design / technical stuff.
Because I get more satisfaction doings the things rather than telling other to do
Anyone in the same dilemma as me and any suggestions on how to get on with working life?
Hey. I'm a software and web developer for ~3 years, and I want to start learning 3D network game programming.
What is the most modern & fastest way to write 3D PC games? What language? For graphics, should I use a graphics API like Direct3D/OpenGL or is there something less painful?
What math/physics skills should I know before starting?
Thank you.
What are the best IDE's / IDE plugins / Tools, etc for programming with CUDA / MPI etc?
I've been working in these frameworks for a short while but feel like the IDE could be doing more heavy lifting in terms of scaling and job processing interactions.
(I usually use Eclipse or Netbeans, and usually in C/C++ with occasional Java, and its a vague question but I can't think of any more specific way to put it)
i need the code for sorting of numbers in ascending order using visual c++ in the windows forms,the output comes on the forms text box and i am doing it in visual studio....
anyone please help...provide the code
Besides Arduino, what other ways are there to learn hardware programming in a hands-on way? Are there any nifty kits available, either a pre-assembled robot, that you can program to move a certain way, or do certain things, or anything similar to that?