10-12-2005
I think this has to do with the fact that you are using C++. Cant test that now. Sorry.
6 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting
1. Programming
Hi All,
is it possible to find out the size of an array of structures ( without using 'sizeof' operator). The condition is we have the array of structure instant but we are not aware of the elements inside the structure.
Can someone help me out?
Thanks in advance. (18 Replies)
Discussion started by: rvan
18 Replies
2. Programming
The below code throws the error, since the size of x = 19 is not passed to the cstrCopy function.
using namespace std;
static void cstrCopy(char *x, const char*y);
int main ()
{
char x;
const string y = "UNIX FORUM";
cstrCopy(x,y.c_str());
return 0;
}
void cstrCopy(char *x,... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: SamRoj
3 Replies
3. Programming
Hi,
There are some bewildering sizeof() questions I have in my mind. Could anyone shed some light on this?
int main() {
printf("%d\n", sizeof(main)); // Ans: 1
}
That is, the sizeof() a function identifier though it is treated internally as a pointer gives 1 byte always, why?
... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: royalibrahim
5 Replies
4. Programming
Hi,
I have defined the class and call the sizeof(object to class) to get the size.
# include <iostream>
# include <iomanip>
using namespace std;
class sample
{
private:
int i;
float j;
char k;
public:
sample()
{
} (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: ramkrix
2 Replies
5. Shell Programming and Scripting
Hai
how to find size of a file??
ex : /home/kiran/pdk/sample/calibre this is a path
In that I have to find size of a files in side a calibre(it is the folder) like .results or .summary (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: kiran425
1 Replies
6. Programming
Ignoring other considerations for a moment and in general ...
Would there be a difference in result (dot oh or execution) of:
A.
strncpy( a, b, sizeof(a) );
vs.
B.
c = sizeof(a);
strncpy( a, b, c );
My general understanding is (at least I think my understanding is) that... (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: GSalisbury
10 Replies
LEARN ABOUT DEBIAN
wibble-test-genrunner
wibble-test-genrunner(1) General Commands Manual wibble-test-genrunner(1)
NAME
wibble-test-genrunner - Code generator for wibble testsuites.
SYNOPSIS
wibble-test-genrunner header <file>
wibble-test-genrunner main <files>
DESCRIPTION
The program generates .cpp files that are then compiled and linked into a test program for running tests from .test.h files. Examples of
such .test.h files may be found among wibble headers, eg. /usr/include/wibble/regexp.test.h.
In the first form, the program processes a single header file (usually of the form foo.test.h) and produces a corresponding .cpp file to be
compiled. In the second form, it takes as <files> all the .test.h headers and produces a single main.cpp which contains the main() function
of the test program, which then runs all the tests in all the .test.h files. The generated source code is always written to standard output
and it is left up to the user to redirect it to a meaningful location.
The program currently has no options other than the two forms above. The program is intended to be run as part of build process of programs
or libraries using the wibble testing framework. For convenient use from CMake, there is a test.cmake script under /usr/share/wibble, that
takes care of producing all the .cpp files (both per-header and the main one), compiling them and linking them into a single binary which
executes the testsuite.
AUTHOR
Petr Rockai <me@mornfall.net>
wibble-test-genrunner(1)