<p>Wowza! It’s been a while since Part 2, and so much has happened. I’m glad to be back, and I have some “unfinished business” I need to wrap up. Namely: Finish this blog series.</p>
Geany is a powerful, stable and lightweight programmer's text editor that provides tons of useful features without bogging down your workflow. It runs on Linux, Windows and MacOS is translated into over 40 languages, and has built-in support for more than 50 programming languages.
- twitter.com/MacSlow
- OpenSource and computer-graphics geek. I like/ride motorcycles too! Ex-Canonical/Ubuntu, CTO & co-founder of spot-on, currently at Heindenhain Numeric B.V.
C/C++ extension does not include a C++ compiler. So, you will need to install one or use which is already installed on your computer. Also, Make sure to add C++ compiler PATH to environment variable…
I was recently reminded of why I think it’s a bad idea to teach beginners C++. It’s a bad idea because it is an objective mess–albeit a beautiful, twisted, tragic, wondrous mess. Despite the current state of the community, this post is not a polemic against modern C++. This post is partly a follow-up on Simon Brand’s article, Initialization in C++ is bonkers, and partly a message to every student who’s wanted to begin their education by gazing into the abyss.