Whatever, Like I already said. I'm not a C++ programmer. I am only stating what I know.
No. VC++ is not a language. It does not use .NET. C++/CLI uses .NET. This is a very simple concept to understand. C++ != C++/CLI.
If you compile C++ code in MSVS it is not converted to IL. It is converted to assembly, therefore it does not use .NET.
Whatever, Like I already said. I'm not a C++ programmer. I am only stating what I know.
I don't get why C++ is called "c++"... What does it stand for? (I'm not a coder or programmer so I don't know alot of stuff)
Last edited by Das Face; 08-07-2011 at 07:53 PM.
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Many reasons why:
- C uses the ++ operator which increases the value of a variable (Think about the increases the value part)
- C++ is on the most part, just C but with classes
- C+ sounds stupid
- Two pluses compounds to make it sound better. Kind of like when people say 'Super Supreme' or 'Specialty Deluxe' (Darn, now I want pizza) it was created so sound like a super enhanced programming language I guess
C++ started out as C with classes. At its current state it is far beyond "C with classes", e.g., templates.