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Divya, marking his reply as answer will help others know that it's a good answer and that it helped you. I've marked it now, and you can too.
"Real men drive manual transmission" - Rajesh.
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As mentioned, GetSysInfo() will give you the physical memory, but then you have to ask yourself why you want to know this since half of this is physically reserved for the kernel, but the virtual memory each process runs in will be addressable memory up to 4 GB regardless of what you have physically.
So, what are you trying to do and why?
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Nothing to say.
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Eric, what I am trying to find is 'guess-timate' (I finally found an occasion to use this word) the amount of memory available to my application (a rather loose statement, I know.. but hopefully gives the idea).
An algorithm in the app that needs quite a lot of memory would need to know if that memory is available or not. Its a dedicated app, there is little chance of some other app requesting a large chunk of memory in parallel.
The memory the algorithm will use is known (or can be approximately figured out based on the input data). So I was hoping that these 2 numbers (available memory and needed memory) would help in a quick decision making as to whether we should proceed with the processing or not.
thanks for the reply!
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OK, so in fact you can allocate a massive chunk of memory, because the system will page it out for you if it cant physically fit in RAM. (It will page it out in pages, 4k chunks, so you might want to organise your memory usage so commonly used stuff is on the same page(s) in order to keep it resident in memory)
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Nothing to say.
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Also note that "available memory" != "biggest continous block you can allocate". What i mean is something like this:
[1 MB of free memory][2 MB of already allocated memory][3 MB of free memory]
If you query the amount of free memory, you get 4 MB, if you try to allocate a 4 MB block, it will fail because the biggest continous free chunk is only 3MB. I'm just sayinmg because we ran into this already once or twice...
> The problem with computers is that they do what you tell them to do and not what you want them to do. <
> If it doesn't matter, it's antimatter.<
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hi
i had create progress bar which is moving nicely according to my need .
i had two label that is at starting point as (progress) and as (0%).
i want to know how to update the (0%) according to my current positions.
help me out of this .
thanks
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Is your label a static control? If so, have you tried calling SetWindowText() ?
"One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson
"Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons
"Some people are making such thorough preparation for rainy days that they aren't enjoying today's sunshine." - William Feather
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When you create the window for the "0%" do you give it it's own unique ID, or juts use -1 or some other generic value. My reason for asking is that typically when creating a static control using a dialog/resource editor, the control gets an ID that can thwart an attempt to uniquely identify it later. (unless you maintain a global variable that holds the HWND of the static control)
The two approaches you may use are (1) maintain a global variable to hold the HWND of the control and (2) use a #define to give the static control a unique ID.
In the first approach you have the HWND already and just need to set the text, while the second approach means you need to retrieve the HWND by using the control id, before then going on to alter the text.
Approach 1:
HWND globalPercentCompleteLabelHwnd;
globalPercentCompleteLabelHwnd = CreateWindow(WC_STATIC, "0%", windowStyle, xPos,yPos, width,height, hwndParent, (HMENU)-1, hInstance, NULL);
...
...
...
SetWindowText(globalPercentCompleteLabelHwnd, "Some new text");
Approach 2:
#define IDC_PERCENT_STATIC 10001 // or any other arbitrary, UNIQUE id
CreateWindow(WC_STATIC, "0%", windowStyle, xPos,yPos, width,height, hwndParent, (HMENU)IDC_PERCENT_STATIC, hInstance, NULL);
...
...
...
HWND tmpCompleteLabelHwnd = GetDlgItem(hwndParent, ID_PERCENT_STATIC);
SetWindowText(tmpPercentCompleteLabelHwnd, "Some other new text");
Approach 1 relies on maintaining a global variable, while the second method implies a way of gaining access to the HWND of the control's parent - which you already have if changing the text inside the main WindowProcedure.
modified on Monday, September 19, 2011 10:40 AM
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And what happened?
"One man's wage rise is another man's price increase." - Harold Wilson
"Fireproof doesn't mean the fire will never come. It means when the fire comes that you will be able to withstand it." - Michael Simmons
"Some people are making such thorough preparation for rainy days that they aren't enjoying today's sunshine." - William Feather
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I created a dlll using atl libaray with VS2008, how can I debug dll(COM)?
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john5632 wrote: how can I debug dll(COM)
I assume you have an Exe associated with that dll.
Place breakpoints in your DLL and mention the Executable(exe) as the startup program in your Dll.This way you can step in to the code and watch the variables etc
Hope this helps!
"Every morning I go through Forbes list of 40 richest people in the world. If my name is not in there, I go to work..!!!"
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Create the test application in the same solution. Put the breakpoints in the COM dll sour code. Load the COM library in that test app, instantiate/query the required Interfaces/CoClasses. This is one of basic technique.
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Lets say you have a simple project in VC++. Is there an
easy way (or a way) to compile that project so that the
program can be run as a web application? If so, we
visual studio compiler do you need to do this.
Please, any response any one can give me will be greatly
appreciated.
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No there isn't an easy way to do it. You must redesign the application as a Web one (that is, roughly speaking, a client/server one).
If the Lord God Almighty had consulted me before embarking upon the Creation, I would have recommended something simpler.
-- Alfonso the Wise, 13th Century King of Castile.
This is going on my arrogant assumptions. You may have a superb reason why I'm completely wrong.
-- Iain Clarke
[My articles]
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With that said, why not reply directly to the OP, because he won't otherwise receive any email notification of your post (which might actually be of benefit).
"Real men drive manual transmission" - Rajesh.
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This is of course going to depend on what the C++ applicaiton is doing, and how (of if) it is communicating with other modules.
If it is talking to Hardware, doing DCOM, and generally being very much part of a PC, then no. It is impossible.
If it isnt, then how about just importing the code into a C# project? (And doing the necessary syntax changes)
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Nothing to say.
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I was going to say "it depends", but you were more eloquent about it!
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As others have said, no, not in any universal way.
However, Google's browser Chrome can now run plugins written in C or C++ through their Native Client.
You'd have to use their modified GCC compiler, and it would only work in Chrome, but would let you re-compile to a web app.
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Hi,
I have a button that is supposed to increase the size of an image when it's held down. I want it so that when the button is held down, I get a repeated event.
How do I know in my application that a button is held down, is there an event generated that is sent to the window procedure ?
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You'll get a WM_CHAR message sent each time (a) a key is pressed or (b) a key has been held for long enough to trigger another 'key-pressed' event.
Here's a minimal WindowProcedure
LRESULT CALLBACK WindowProcedure (HWND hwnd, UINT message, WPARAM wParam, LPARAM lParam)
{
switch (message)
{
case WM_DESTROY:
PostQuitMessage (0);
break;
case WM_CHAR:
printf("Key Pressed: %c\n", wParam);
break;
default:
return DefWindowProc (hwnd, message, wParam, lParam);
}
return 0;
}
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