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Is there any free tool that improves Intellisense and provides code snippet in vc++ 2008?
Please don't post commercial tools
Visual Assist
In my experience the intellisense in VS is excellent, when it works. Whether through some quirk of how projects are set up, or a bug in VS, I don't know. But often on larger projects it ceases to work properly. I have not yet encountered that with Visual Assist.
No, not that I am aware of.
Can you explain what you would like to see improved in the intellisense engine? It's possible some of the behavior you are seeing is a bug that we may be able to help you work around if you can detail what's going on.
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Closed 9 years ago.
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Except from HTMLpad and Dreamweaver, what software is best to use when developing websites? I tried to find the one that code academy uses, but unfortunately, i cannot find something like that. I would like to have something which automatically indents and that it automatically tells you if there is something wrong.
Aptana Studio 3 is a useful IDE (Integrated Development Environment) based off of Eclipse to use.
http://www.aptana.com/
If you are into paid IDE's then WebStorm/PhpStorm/RubyMine may not be a bad choice, especially if you also work with Android Studio or IntelliJ IDEA
http://www.jetbrains.com/webstorm/
These may catch syntax errors and help you with formatting, but as with most IDE's it won't catch any logic errors.
I personally use Sublime Text as it handles formatting and does not carry any extra bloat as HTML/CSS and JavaScript are relatively simple languages. It does not do error checking.
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Is there a Plugin that goes through your CB C++ Code and highlights your mistakes?
Similar to Eclipse or Visual Studio?
SO that you can see if you made a mistake before compiling?
Or if it doesn't, is there a C++ Linux IDE that can do that?
A quick answer, just to add a little more knowledge to this topic:
You must definitely check out NetBeans. Netbeans 6.7 has the following features:
C/C++ Projects and Templates: Supports syntax highlighting, automatic code completion, automatic indentation.
It has a C/C++ Debugger
Supports Compiler Configurations, Configuration Manager and Makefile Support (with a Wizard).
It has a Classes Window, a Usages Window and a File Navigation Window (or panel).
A Macro expansion view, and also tooltips.
Support for QT development.
I think it's a perfect (and far better) Visual Studio substitution, and a very good tool to learn C/C++.
Good Luck!
EDIT:
I also have a few other favorites, which in my opinion are good substitutes for what you are looking for.
-KDevelop4
-CodeBlocks 8.02
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Could you suggest some open source tools that analyze C++ code and checks the following rules:
naming conventions,
file inclusions,
function design,
data types,
flow control,
memory allocation,
file handling,
portable code,
runs under Solaris or SUSE
http://www.google.com/search?q=misra+checker
Of course, if the rules you're trying to enforce don't exactly match someone else's idea of a coding standard, no existing tool is going to work.
It is still in early development (especially for C++) but its improving rapidly and is a really interesting open source project in a vibrant community. So see if the CLang Static Analyzer does what you need.
I have used coverity (http://coverity.com/)in my organization. It does static bug check analysis and I found it to be very useful. It is highly customization and provides a number of checks. I am not entirely sure if it works on solaris or not but I would recommend checking it out.
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For my small hobby project I need to emit machine code from C++ program in runtime. I have base address 0xDEADBEEF and want to write something like this:
Assembler a((void*)0xDEADBEEF);
a.Emit() <<
Push(Reg::Eax) <<
Push(Reg::Ebx) <<
Jmp(0xFEFEFEFE);
Inline assembler isn't my choice because generated machine code is dependent of the program state.
Does anybody know any existing library for doing this? If no, would it be a good idea to develop one from scratch and make it open source? (I mean, will anybody ever use this library if it existed?)
Check out Asmjit. It seems to be the thing you're looking for.
You could use Nicolas Capen's softwire. Its really not supported any more as he now works on a similar product at Transgaming called SoftAsm. Still it kinda does what you want.
Edit June 2014: - It appears the sourceforge link above has been removed but it appears to be available under an LGPL license here.
This might be a overkill, because it supports many platforms, has its own intermediate language, does optimizations, etc, but the http://llvm.org/ seems to be a god try.
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I'm looking to work with others to quickly build a rather large class flow diagram that may or may not be strict UML. Can anyone recommend a networked, concurrent collaboration tool for such a task? Price is not an issue, but the target system must be Windows.
Surely someone must have done something like this in the past.
Any ideas?
DabbleBoard has an online diagramming tool that may do what you want. It should work on Windows, although it is a web-based and fairly low-level.
I don't know exactly how concurrent you need it, but Google Docs have just introduced a 'drawing' document type, which is basically a stencil based system like visio. It includes flowchart elements, and of course can be shared.