c++ Programming Glossary: smells
Global const string& smells bad to me, is it truly safe? http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1028443/global-const-string-smells-bad-to-me-is-it-truly-safe  const string smells bad to me is it truly safe  I'm reviewing a collegue's code.. SomeConstant This is some constant text Personally this smells bad to me because the reference is referring to what I'm assuming.. 
 WinForms interthread modification http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1110458/winforms-interthread-modification  in one spot I've thought about reusing delegates but that smells badly. I think that my question can apply to all languages where.. 
 Pros and cons of using nested C++ classes and enumerations? http://stackoverflow.com/questions/216748/pros-and-cons-of-using-nested-c-classes-and-enumerations  by magnitudes the perceived advantages. Furthermore it smells as a clumsy attempt to simulate namespacing without using C.. 
 Visual Studio 2010 and std::function http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2425277/visual-studio-2010-and-stdfunction  . If with functional it fails with MSVC10 in C 0x mode it smells like a bug i would say. But maybe someone else knows what's.. 
 What exactly is a reentrant function? http://stackoverflow.com/questions/2799023/what-exactly-is-a-reentrant-function  persistent resource or has gives access to a function that smells . Ok 99 of our code should smell then... See last section to.. 
 A better way to split a string into an array of strings in C/C++ using whitespace as a delimiter http://stackoverflow.com/questions/3162108/a-better-way-to-split-a-string-into-an-array-of-strings-in-c-c-using-whitespac  it make it short and sweet I can tell that this code smells for instance because of the else clause all the way at the end... 
 Why should I avoid multiple inheritance in C++? http://stackoverflow.com/questions/406081/why-should-i-avoid-multiple-inheritance-in-c    share improve this question   Multiple inheritance smells which means that usually it was done for bad reasons and it.. 
 Detect dynamically allocated object? http://stackoverflow.com/questions/7434062/detect-dynamically-allocated-object  t false is_tmp pt true Context I perfectly realise this smells like bad design and as a matter of fact it is but I am trying.. 
 
 
     
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