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  2. Server Side Includes - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Server_Side_Includes

    Example include: file or virtual This is probably the most used SSI directive. It allows the content of one document to be transcluded in another. The included document can itself be another SSI-enabled file. The file or virtual parameters specify the file (HTML page, text file, script, etc.) to be included.

  3. Include directive - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Include_directive

    Generally, for C/C++ the include directive is used to include a header file, but can include any file. Although relatively uncommon, it is sometimes used to include a body file such as a .c file. The include directive can support encapsulation and reuse. Different parts of a system can be segregated into logical groupings yet rely on one ...

  4. Wt (web toolkit) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wt_(web_toolkit)

    Wt (pronounced "witty") is an open-source widget-centric web framework for the C++ programming language. It has an API resembling that of Qt framework (although it was developed with Boost, and is incompatible when mixed with Qt), also using a widget-tree and an event-driven signal/slot system.

  5. Name mangling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Name_mangling

    The linker needs a great deal of information on each program entity. For example, to correctly link a function it needs its name, the number of arguments and their types, and so on. The simple programming languages of the 1970s, like C, only distinguished subroutines by their name, ignoring other information including parameter and return types.

  6. Naming convention (programming) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Naming_convention...

    By convention, this prefix is only used in cases when the identifier would otherwise be either a reserved keyword (such as for and while), which may not be used as an identifier without the prefix, or a contextual keyword (such as from and where), in which cases the prefix is not strictly required (at least not at its declaration; for example ...

  7. C++ string handling - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C++_string_handling

    The std::string type is the main string datatype in standard C++ since 1998, but it was not always part of C++. From C, C++ inherited the convention of using null-terminated strings that are handled by a pointer to their first element, and a library of functions that manipulate such strings.

  8. C++ Standard Library - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C++_Standard_Library

    In other words, C++ does not have "submodules", meaning the . symbol which may be included in a module name bears no syntactic meaning and is used only to suggest the association of a module. As an example, std.compat is not a submodule of std , but is named so to indicate the association the module bears to the std module (as a "compatibility ...

  9. include guard - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Include_guard

    For #include guards to work properly, each guard must test and conditionally set a different preprocessor macro. Therefore, a project using #include guards must work out a coherent naming scheme for its include guards, and make sure its scheme doesn't conflict with that of any third-party headers it uses, or with the names of any globally visible macros.