When a non-bool x is converted to a bool, non-zero becomes true and zero becomes false, as if you had written x != 0. When bool is converted to non-bool, true becomes 1 and false becomes 0.The type "BOOL" is a Windows type, and it's just a typedef for int. As such, it ...
What is the difference between _T("some string") and L"some string"? All replies (1) Wednesday, February 6, 2008 1:00 AM ✅Answered | 1 vote _T("Text") is a narrow-character (ASCII) literal in an ANSI build but a wide character (UNICODE) literal in a Unicode build. L"Text...
What is the difference between _T("some string") and L"some string"? All replies (1) Wednesday, February 6, 2008 1:00 AM ✅Answered | 1 vote _T("Text") is a narrow-character (ASCII) literal in an ANSI build but a wide character (UNICODE) literal in a Unicode build. L"Text"...
'__cplusplus' is not defined as a preprocessor macro, replacing with '0' for '#if/#elif' '/clr' and '/std:c++latest' command-line options are incompatible '/MT' and '/clr' command-line options are incompatible 'afxwin.h': No such file or directory when using Visual Studio 2017 - ...
When a non-bool x is converted to a bool, non-zero becomes true and zero becomes false, as if you had written x != 0. When bool is converted to non-bool, true becomes 1 and false becomes 0.The type "BOOL" is a Windows type, and it's just a typedef for int. As such, it ...
What is the difference between _T("some string") and L"some string"? All replies (1) Wednesday, February 6, 2008 1:00 AM ✅Answered | 1 vote _T("Text") is a narrow-character (ASCII) literal in an ANSI build but a wide character (UNICODE) literal in a Unicode build. L"Text"...
When a non-bool x is converted to a bool, non-zero becomes true and zero becomes false, as if you had written x != 0. When bool is converted to non-bool, true becomes 1 and false becomes 0.The type "BOOL" is a Windows type, and it's just a typedef for int. As such, it ...