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c++ Programming Glossary: behave

Inline functions vs Preprocessor macros

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1137575/inline-functions-vs-preprocessor-macros

Representing 128-bit numbers in C++

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1188939/representing-128-bit-numbers-in-c

the best way to represent a 128 bit number in C It should behave as closely to the built in numeric types as possible i.e. support..

Address of register variable

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1256246/address-of-register-variable

another case of C and C having identical features that behave the way you'd expect them most of the time but diverge and cause..

What is an undefined reference/unresolved external symbol error and how do I fix it?

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/12573816/what-is-an-undefined-reference-unresolved-external-symbol-error-and-how-do-i-fix

environment. emphasis mine footnote Implementations must behave as if these separate phases occur although in practice different..

Which iomanip manipulators are 'sticky'?

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1532640/which-iomanip-manipulators-are-sticky

Charles Exactly and the only reason that setw appears to behave differently is because there are requirements on formatted output..

Spinlock versus Semaphore

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/195853/spinlock-versus-semaphore

be a very efficient CPU conservative approach. 3. How they behave in presence of congestion It is a common misconception that.. one important difference is how the different approaches behave in presence of congestion . A well designed system normally..

Undefined, unspecified and implementation-defined behavior

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2397984/undefined-unspecified-and-implementation-defined-behavior

Basically it is possible to write C programs that do not behave in a predictable way even though many C compilers will not report..

Microsecond resolution timestamps on Windows

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2414359/microsecond-resolution-timestamps-on-windows

are broken the whole system will go havoc and in general behave strangely reporting negative elapsed times slowing down etc...

Windows Phone 7 and native C++/CLI

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2455372/windows-phone-7-and-native-c-cli

What is the point of function pointers?

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2592137/what-is-the-point-of-function-pointers

into f but into the callback function. Callers can make f behave differently by passing different callback functions. A classic..

Why are unnamed namespaces used and what are their benefits?

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/357404/why-are-unnamed-namespaces-used-and-what-are-their-benefits

an identifier effectively translation unit local. They behave as if you would choose an unique name per translation unit for..

Why is there no call to the constructor?

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3810570/why-is-there-no-call-to-the-constructor

is there no call to the constructor This code doesn't behave how I expect it to. #include iostream using namespace std class..

What are Aggregates and PODs and how/why are they special?

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4178175/what-are-aggregates-and-pods-and-how-why-are-they-special

Operator overloading

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4421706/operator-overloading

or your users code won ™t compile or your users code will behave surprisingly. Assignment Operator There's a lot to be said about..

Why no default move-assignment/move-constructor?

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/4819936/why-no-default-move-assignment-move-constructor

C Standard so currently available compilers will likely behave differently with respect to implicit generation. For more about..

Performance of built-in types : char vs short vs int vs. float vs. double

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5069489/performance-of-built-in-types-char-vs-short-vs-int-vs-float-vs-double

people are expecting their phones and other devices to behave more and more like real computers and hardware designers are..

How to convert a number to string and vice versa in C++

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/5290089/how-to-convert-a-number-to-string-and-vice-versa-in-c

documentation on both atoi and atof including how they behave in case of bad input. However the link contains an error in..

What does the restrict keyword mean in C++?

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/776283/what-does-the-restrict-keyword-mean-in-c

it . In C compilers that support it it should probably behave the same as in C. See this SO post for details Realistic usage..

How does std::forward work? [duplicate]

http://stackoverflow.com/questions/8526598/how-does-stdforward-work

it's an lvalue if that's the case why does std forward behave differently when I pass thing x vs thing x c c 11 share improve..