Showing results for March 2008 - The Old New Thing

Mar 31, 2008
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You can drag multiple virtual objects, you know

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

A customer wanted to know how they could find out the directory that the user dropped a file onto. As we already noted, users can drop files onto things other than directories, so the question itself comes with incorrect hidden assumptions. This is another one of those cases where you have to ask the customer, "What are you really trying to do?" ...

CodeWhat a drag
Mar 28, 2008
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Microspeak: Newplacement

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

When talking about why people buy computers, there are two broad categories, "replacement computers" (those which replace an older machine being retired) and "new placement computers" (those which do not). Now, sure, you have to call them something, but "new placements" sounds kind of markety. Then again, I felt the same way about using "seats" to...

Non-ComputerMicrospeak
Mar 27, 2008
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Meet Deltalina, the star of Delta's new in-flight safety video

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

Who knew that in-flight safety videos could be so popular? Introduced to the world on the Delta blog, the latest Delta in-flight safety video has generated quite a buzz around the Internet. Well, more accurately, the buzz surrounds the video's star, flight attendant Katherine Lee, known to her drooling fans as Deltalina, with secondary ...

Non-Computer
Mar 27, 2008
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Why do structures get tag names even if there is a typedef?

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

As we noted last time, structure tags are different from the typedef name as a historical artifact of earlier versions of the C language. But what about just leaving out the name entirely? One problem with this approach is that it becomes impossible to make a forward reference to this structure because it has no name. For example, if you wanted...

History
Mar 26, 2008
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We hope you enjoyed this bus tour of Charles de Gaulle International Airport

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

My trip to Lisbon entailed a connection in Paris at Charles de Gaulle International Airport. So now, I've technically been to France, but since I never left the airport, I don't think it really counts. (When I mentioned to one of my colleagues that I paid a brief visit to his native country, he replied, "I hope it went okay." Off my confused ...

Non-Computer
Mar 26, 2008
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Why are structure names different from their typedef names?

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

In Windows header files, many structures are declared like this: Why is the structure name different from typedef name? This is a holdover from very early versions of the C language where structure tags, union tags, and typedefs were kept in the same namespace. Consequently, you couldn't say . At the open brace, the compiler registers as a ...

History
Mar 25, 2008
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Happy Waffle Day! And other holidays named after food

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

Today is Waffle Day in Sweden, and the reason why today of all days is Waffle Day I find quite amusing. March 25th is the Feast of The Annunciation according to the Catholic Church calendar, the day on which the archangel Gabriel announced to Mary that she would conceive a child, the Son of God. Why March 25th? The date was arrived at by the ...

Non-Computer
Mar 25, 2008
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What's the difference between int and INT, long and LONG, etc?

Raymond Chen
Raymond Chen

When you go through Windows header files, you'll see types with names , , , and so on. What's the difference between these types and the uncapitalized ones? Well, there isn't one any more. What follows is an educated guess as to the story behind these types. The application binary interface for an operating system needs to be unambiguous. ...

History