The Standard C++ Library
The 1998 C++ standard consists of two parts: the core language and the C++ standard library; the...
Read MorePosted by M. Saqib | Sep 10, 2008 | C++ Programming: Different Articles on C++ Programming |
The 1998 C++ standard consists of two parts: the core language and the C++ standard library; the...
Read MorePosted by M. Saqib | Sep 10, 2008 | C++ Programming: Different Articles on C++ Programming |
An exception usually signals an error. One of the major features in C++ is exception handling, which is a better way of thinking about and handling errors. Thought it doesn’t always indicate an error, it can also signal some particularly unusual even in your program that deserves special attention. This article also covers try, throw, and catch, the C++ keywords that support exception handling.
Read MorePosted by M. Saqib | Sep 10, 2008 | C++ Programming: Different Articles on C++ Programming |
Operator Overloading enables us to make the standard operators, like +, -, * etc, to work with the objects of our own data types or classes. We can write a function which redefines a particular operator so that it performs a specific operation when it is used with the object of a class.
Read MorePosted by M. Saqib | Sep 10, 2008 | C++ Programming: Different Articles on C++ Programming |
Exceptions are the way of flagging unexpected conditions or errors that have occurred in C++ program. C++ Language provides a good mechanism to tackle these conditions. The exception mechanism uses three keywords: try, catch and throw.
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