domae@heat.nrtc.northrop.com (Terry Domae <tdomae>) (05/25/89)
I was wondering if anyone had an electric C++ mode for GNU Emacs. The electric C mode works mostly, but ... when dealing with classes, and (public and private) labels it's horrible. Terry Domae Northrop Research and Technology Center Terry Domae
schmidt@ics.uci.edu (Doug Schmidt) (05/25/89)
In article <1737@gremlin.nrtc.northrop.com> domae@heat.nrtc.northrop.com (Terry Domae <tdomae>) writes:
++ I was wondering if anyone had an electric C++ mode for GNU Emacs.
++
++ The electric C mode works mostly, but ... when dealing with classes,
++ and (public and private) labels it's horrible.
++
++ Terry Domae
++ Northrop Research and Technology Center
David Detlefs of CMU has donated a very nice c++-mode.el that handles
most of C++ syntax for use with GNU EMACS. It is included in recent
libg++ distributions, in the ./etc directory.
If you do not have libg++ or (heaven forbid) you don't have GNU g++ 1.35
you can obtain these via anonymous ftp from either
prep.ai.mit.edu
or
yahi.stanford.edu // Internet number 36.83.0.92
The distribution on yahi (called g++.xtar.Z) is generally more recent
than the one on prep.
GNU g++ 1.35 contains most documented cfront 2.0 features (multiple
inheritance, class specific new and delete operators, etc.) as well as
other useful addition such as static class member functions. Anyone
interested in getting a head start on using cfront 2.0 features is
strong encouraged to get a copy of GNU g++ and libg++ NOW!
Doug
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And asking about Buddha +------------------------+
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