Book Image

C++ Windows Programming

By : Stefan Björnander
Book Image

C++ Windows Programming

By: Stefan Björnander

Overview of this book

It is critical that modern developers have the right tools to build practical, user-friendly, and efficient applications in order to compete in today’s market. Through hands-on guidance, this book illustrates and demonstrates C++ best practices and the Small Windows object-oriented class library to ease your development of interactive Windows applications. Begin with a focus on high level application development using Small Windows. Learn how to build four real-world applications which focus on the general problems faced when developing graphical applications. Get essential troubleshooting guidance on drawing, spreadsheet, and word processing applications. Finally finish up with a deep dive into the workings of the Small Windows class library, which will give you all the insights you need to build your own object-oriented class library in C++.
Table of Contents (22 chapters)
C++ Windows Programming
Credits
About the Author
About the Reviewer
www.PacktPub.com
Dedication
Preface
Free Chapter
1
Introduction

Source and target sets


Each cell in the spreadsheet holds a numerical value, a formula, or a (possibly empty) plain text. As mentioned at the beginning of the chapter, a formula is a text beginning with the equal sign (=) followed by a numerical expression with cell references. If the cell holds a value, it may affect the values in other cells (if it does not hold a value, it might cause evaluation errors in target cells). If the cell contains a formula, its value may depend on the values in other cells. This implies that each cell needs a set of cells that it depends on, that is, its source set, and a set of cells that depend on it, that is, its target set.

Only a formula has a non-empty source set, which is the set of all references of the formula. The target set, on the other hand, is more complicated–a cell does not decide its own target set; it is decided indirectly by the formulas that have it as its source cell.

In mathematical terms, the cells with its source and target sets constitute...