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Zac Howland wrote: First, using operations like CreateWindow in your constructor is dangerous since if CreateWindow fails, you have not completed your construction of the object. It is safer to initialize any variables and have a separate Create function to create your window.
I disagree with you on that one. If CreateWindow fails the DllWindow member will be NULL, but the CDllWindow class object will still be successfully created.
Zac Howland wrote: Doing this as part of the static memory allocation for your Dll can cause problems if the DLL fails to load properly. Basically, the same arguments for not calling CreateWindow inside your DllMain apply to calling it before it gets called as well.
That is what I was afraid of, but I was hoping it was not the case. Oh well, I guess I will have to think up a different method to do what I want.
You may be right I may be crazy -- Billy Joel --
Within you lies the power for good, use it!!!
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Ok, taking your two points into consideration I think I have come up with a solution that should work. I still disagree with your first point on a general level, but in this instance a seperate Create function is just what I need.
Thanks for your input
You may be right I may be crazy -- Billy Joel --
Within you lies the power for good, use it!!!
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The rule is actually "Don't do anything dangerous while the loader lock is taken." This is usually shortened to "Don't do anything dangerous in DllMain() " because that version is more easily understood.
Your DllMain() is only one part of the module initialization. There is CRT code that runs before DllMain() (by default it's called DllMainCRTStartup() IIRC) that is responsible for constructing globals in the DLL. All that code runs while the loader lock is taken, so it must not do anything that would cause a deadlock.
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Thanks Mike
You may be right I may be crazy -- Billy Joel --
Within you lies the power for good, use it!!!
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Hello
Looks like my C++ is getting really rusty. While playing a bit in a console project the following code gave me a strange heap corruption error.
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
void main()
{
char* MyText = new char;
cin>>MyText;
delete[] MyText;
}
It's not even an exception. Sometimes it says "Windows have set a breakpoint in your application because of a heap error." And a break point appears somewhere in the iostream file.
Other times, an ugly error message appears saying "HEAP CORRUPTION DETECTED after a normal block. CRT detected that application wrote to memory after end of heap buffer.",
Any clue??
Regards
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Nader Elshehabi wrote: char* MyText = new char;
cin>>MyText;
delete[] MyText;
new matches up with delete . new[] matches up with delete[] . Calling delete[] on something that was new 'd will result in a heap corruption.
To fix the problem:
void main()
{
char* MyText = new char;
cin>>MyText;
delete MyText;
}
or
void main()
{
char* MyText = new char[100];
cin>>MyText;
delete [] MyText;
}
If you decide to become a software engineer, you are signing up to have a 1/2" piece of silicon tell you exactly how stupid you really are for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week
Zac
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Hello
Thanks for replying.
Well, the first coder didn't work, while the second did. Yet, that makes a buffer of N chars. That's not what I want. What if the user inputs n+1 chars. I tried it and it made the same heap corruption error. Also what if I dynamically reallocate my array -or pointer-??
If you got more details or point me to some article about this issue, I'd be grateful.
Thanks again.
Regards
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Nader Elshehabi wrote: Well, the first coder didn't work, while the second did.
The first code has another problem due to the fact that cin's operator>> will pull in 2 characters even if you only typed 1 (the character you typed and a '\0' to terminate the string). If you are only trying to pull in 1 character, the cin.getc() would work better.
Nader Elshehabi wrote: Yet, that makes a buffer of N chars. That's not what I want. What if the user inputs n+1 chars.
You will not be able to use the operator>> to do this (at least not yet ... as I said, the new proposal for the C++ standard has all overloaded operators that deal with char* now also overloaded for string). What you can do is iterate through it:
char ch;
string input;
while ((ch = cin.getc()) != '\n')
{
input += ch;
}
That will prevent any possibility of a buffer overflow issue, but will also be VERY slow (in comparison to pulling down a whole set of data at once).
If you decide to become a software engineer, you are signing up to have a 1/2" piece of silicon tell you exactly how stupid you really are for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week
Zac
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Hello
Thanks again for your reply! I got two more questions . Take a look at this code;
char* MyText = new char[5];
cin>>MyText;
MyText = new char[10];
delete[] MyText;
Now , I called a second new without deleting the first one. Is there a leak here??
What if I didn't call a delete at all!! Once my program finishes and closes. Will the memory be freed?
Or will it be permanently locked until reboot?
Regards
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Nader Elshehabi wrote: Is there a leak here??
Yes.
Nader Elshehabi wrote: Will the memory be freed?
Yes.
"Talent without discipline is like an octopus on roller skates. There's plenty of movement, but you never know if it's going to be forward, backwards, or sideways." - H. Jackson Brown, Jr.
"Judge not by the eye but by the heart." - Native American Proverb
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Hello
Short, and straight answers!!
Thanks
Regards
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Nader Elshehabi wrote: Now , I called a second new without deleting the first one. Is there a leak here??
Are you coming from a Java/C# background by chance? Yes, this will result in a memory leak. Whenever you use new, you must have a delete call to match it. Having 2 calls to new and only 1 call to delete means here is a leak.
Nader Elshehabi wrote: What if I didn't call a delete at all!! Once my program finishes and closes. Will the memory be freed?
Or will it be permanently locked until reboot?
When the program exits its memory will be freed. You do NOT want to rely on this, though. Always clean up your memory properly.
If you decide to become a software engineer, you are signing up to have a 1/2" piece of silicon tell you exactly how stupid you really are for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week
Zac
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Hello
Zac Howland wrote: Are you coming from a Java/C# background by chance?
Well, somehow ! I was a good old timer C++ programmer . But last time I ever wrote C++ code was more than 3 years ago. So I got really rusty, coming back these days to C++ as a new comer.
So, while refreshing all that good ol' C++ of mine, it's nice to have you guys around;)
Thanks again.
Extra Regards
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That's code is a good the way to read a single line, try this instead:
getline(cin, input);
Steve
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That still has the problem that he will need to limit his buffer size in order to prevent overrun problems. And the safer version is:
char buffer[100] = {0};
cin.getline(buffer, 99);
If you decide to become a software engineer, you are signing up to have a 1/2" piece of silicon tell you exactly how stupid you really are for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week
Zac
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You don't have to limit the size of the buffer, you use std::string . ie.
string line;
getline(cin, line);
Assumes using namespace std; and #include <iostream> and finally #include <string>
Steve
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Ah, you are correct. I completely forgot about the general getline function ...
If you decide to become a software engineer, you are signing up to have a 1/2" piece of silicon tell you exactly how stupid you really are for 8 hours a day, 5 days a week
Zac
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Beside what Zac said, another suspicious area is
cin>>MyText;
When you expected MyText is one char, your input could easily be more than one char, which would cause a memory problem.
Best,
Jun
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Hello Jun.
Actually my input field is char* , and I was expecting a text rather than just one char. Besides, this is nothing more than an experimental project which turned out to be disastrous!!;P
Regards
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Try this instead.
#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
using namespace std;
char *pChar = new char[2];
cin >> setw(2) >> pChar;
delete [] pChar;
return 0;
}
You're reading too many charcters: you've got room for a NULL terminator (a string of zero length!) but your reading more and getting a buffer overrun. My code tells the IO classes how big the buffer is so it will not overrun it.
If you only want to read a single char you could try doing this (in your code):
cin >> *MyText;
Steve
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Thanks Steve! I appreciate your response.
Regards
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In the following program the control code seems to be returning to the start of void::main() after the last line of code has been executed:
void main ()
{
CSentenceList LoadFile("c:/testfile.txt", true);
for (int iIndex = 1; iIndex <= LoadFile.Size; iIndex++)
{cout << LoadFile.display(iIndex) << endl;}
cout << LoadFile.search("john") << endl;
}
Presumably after a number of attempts the program crashes.
crt0.c
...
if ( !managedapp ) // return value is 0 (false)
exit(mainret); // this is where I think the program should exit
...
Any idea why?
Jon
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Have you debugged the code? I would first check if any iIndex value causes "out of range" in your LoadFile.display() method.
Best,
Jun
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Actually that was the problem thanks.
Jon
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probably won't fix the crash, but main should be declared as:
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
or
int main(int argc, char **argv)
(note: this is strictly for style reasons)
-- modified at 15:17 Thursday 31st August, 2006
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