CUJ Gone But Not Forgotten
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I stopped mine and they sent for ages afterwards. Perhaps that has contributed to their demise ? Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
Saw your post above. I recall the article in WDJ. Too bad you haven't gotten DDJ to publish any of your articles. They are all really good here at CP... DDJ doesn't know what they are missing :) Paul
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I may have said here that I got an article in to DDJ. That would be before they ignored all my emails, and just sat on the articles. But I had several in WDJ. Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
Found the one I remember seeing. It's from March 2003, Debugging with IOStreams Extensions. A very well written and informative article :)
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Saw your post above. I recall the article in WDJ. Too bad you haven't gotten DDJ to publish any of your articles. They are all really good here at CP... DDJ doesn't know what they are missing :) Paul
Funny you mention that - one of my image processing articles is basically one of the DDJ articles. The other was on Koenig lookup, and VC2002 come out while I was waiting, so the issue became moot. Although, I think more people still use VC6 than I find remotely reasonable. Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
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Found the one I remember seeing. It's from March 2003, Debugging with IOStreams Extensions. A very well written and informative article :)
Thanks. I wrote that article to learn how to work with iostreams, and it spawned a number of CP articles as well. I got the *best* IOStreams book just before writing that article. I forget what it's called, but I'm sure I refered to it in the article. If you use iostreams, you need that book. Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
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Thanks. I wrote that article to learn how to work with iostreams, and it spawned a number of CP articles as well. I got the *best* IOStreams book just before writing that article. I forget what it's called, but I'm sure I refered to it in the article. If you use iostreams, you need that book. Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
Christian, In the article you recommend Standard C++ IOStreams and Locales authored by Angelika Langer and Klaus Kreft, is this the book?
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Christian, In the article you recommend Standard C++ IOStreams and Locales authored by Angelika Langer and Klaus Kreft, is this the book?
That's the one, yes. Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
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Funny you mention that - one of my image processing articles is basically one of the DDJ articles. The other was on Koenig lookup, and VC2002 come out while I was waiting, so the issue became moot. Although, I think more people still use VC6 than I find remotely reasonable. Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
Too bad about the image processing article with DDJ. In my opinion, though I am not a graphics guy, that would have been very interesting. I guess magazine readers are at the will of what the editors feel is interesting or not? I think the ability of having many good quality articles from the development community is something that makes Code Project really good.
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For the same reason "FORTRAN Today" is hard to find on the newsstands. cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
Chris Maunder wrote:
For the same reason "FORTRAN Today" is hard to find on the newsstands.
Tsk, tsk, a VC++ MVP saying this!!! :-D
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I have subscribed to the C/C++ Users Journal for seven years. I eagerly anticipate its arrival every month. Imagine my disappointment when I read on the cover of the magazine "you are holding in your hands the last issue of the C/C++ Users Journal." For those of you lurking about the message boards that also read this fine magazine, I offer my sympathies and condolence. Does anyone have a suggestion for a replacement? "we must lose precision to make significant statements about complex systems." -deKorvin on uncertainty
:wtf: I recently renewed my subscription for two more years. I wonder if they will return the money? :mad: BTW, which issue had the notice? I haven’t seen anything yet.
ZeePain! wrote:
This seems like one of those programs that started small, grew incrementally, building internal pressure, and finally barfed all over its source code sneakers. Or something.
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Funny you mention that - one of my image processing articles is basically one of the DDJ articles. The other was on Koenig lookup, and VC2002 come out while I was waiting, so the issue became moot. Although, I think more people still use VC6 than I find remotely reasonable. Christian Graus - Microsoft MVP - C++
Christian Graus wrote:
Although, I think more people still use VC6 than I find remotely reasonable.
Yep. Our local downloads for ResOrg (i.e. not including those from CP, for which we don't have metrics) show a 50% split, although that's admittedly a small sample. We're sufficiently concerned about it that we are preparing a version of Visual Lint which will run on VS6 and eVC 4.0 as well as VS2002 onwards. At the very least, it's proving to be an interesting excercise in interface abstraction and UI customisation. Subclassing, anyone? :doh: Anna :rose: Currently working mostly on: Visual Lint :cool: Anna's Place | Tears and Laughter "Be yourself - not what others think you should be" - Marcia Graesch "Anna's just a sexy-looking lesbian tart" - A friend, trying to wind me up. It didn't work.
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I have subscribed to the C/C++ Users Journal for seven years. I eagerly anticipate its arrival every month. Imagine my disappointment when I read on the cover of the magazine "you are holding in your hands the last issue of the C/C++ Users Journal." For those of you lurking about the message boards that also read this fine magazine, I offer my sympathies and condolence. Does anyone have a suggestion for a replacement? "we must lose precision to make significant statements about complex systems." -deKorvin on uncertainty
Indeed, new EU regulations related to reciclable paper lead to situation that this publication is no more allowed in EU. Saying this, the reasons of stopping publishing are clear. Unfortunately, I'm also looking for a replacement. :(
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For the same reason "FORTRAN Today" is hard to find on the newsstands. cheers, Chris Maunder
CodeProject.com : C++ MVP
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:wtf: I recently renewed my subscription for two more years. I wonder if they will return the money? :mad: BTW, which issue had the notice? I haven’t seen anything yet.
ZeePain! wrote:
This seems like one of those programs that started small, grew incrementally, building internal pressure, and finally barfed all over its source code sneakers. Or something.
The December 2005 issue. They will offer to you the compendium CD, a $54.95 value. Or, you can write to them and they will send a refund to you. That's what I'm doing. I already have the CD. "we must lose precision to make significant statements about complex systems." -deKorvin on uncertainty
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The December 2005 issue. They will offer to you the compendium CD, a $54.95 value. Or, you can write to them and they will send a refund to you. That's what I'm doing. I already have the CD. "we must lose precision to make significant statements about complex systems." -deKorvin on uncertainty
Curtis S. wrote:
The December 2005 issue.
Okay, I hadn’t yet gotten a chance to parse through that issue yet. Looking at it though there is no mention of discontinuation of publication. I just checked my mailbox today and found February’s issue waiting for me. Looks like I need to send them an email.
ZeePain! wrote:
This seems like one of those programs that started small, grew incrementally, building internal pressure, and finally barfed all over its source code sneakers. Or something.
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Curtis S. wrote:
The December 2005 issue.
Okay, I hadn’t yet gotten a chance to parse through that issue yet. Looking at it though there is no mention of discontinuation of publication. I just checked my mailbox today and found February’s issue waiting for me. Looks like I need to send them an email.
ZeePain! wrote:
This seems like one of those programs that started small, grew incrementally, building internal pressure, and finally barfed all over its source code sneakers. Or something.
The actual magazine has nothing in it that describes its demise. A cover letter got glued to the face of the magazine. It seems like no one at the magazine knew. All the columnists wrote "...in my next article..." conclusions. Oh, sorry, I looked at the wrong issue laying on the desk. The notice that I received did come with the February 2006 issue, the SECURITY issue. The headlines on the front read Validating C & C++ for Safety and Security Kerberos Authentication Useing GSSAPI & SSPI Recreational Operator Overloading But, of course, when you first get the magazine, all you see is the ugly white paper on front with the letter stating that CUJ has died. "we must lose precision to make significant statements about complex systems." -deKorvin on uncertainty
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The actual magazine has nothing in it that describes its demise. A cover letter got glued to the face of the magazine. It seems like no one at the magazine knew. All the columnists wrote "...in my next article..." conclusions. Oh, sorry, I looked at the wrong issue laying on the desk. The notice that I received did come with the February 2006 issue, the SECURITY issue. The headlines on the front read Validating C & C++ for Safety and Security Kerberos Authentication Useing GSSAPI & SSPI Recreational Operator Overloading But, of course, when you first get the magazine, all you see is the ugly white paper on front with the letter stating that CUJ has died. "we must lose precision to make significant statements about complex systems." -deKorvin on uncertainty
Curtis S. wrote:
But, of course, when you first get the magazine, all you see is the ugly white paper on front with the letter stating that CUJ has died.
The plot thickens; I have the February issue sitting before me now. There was no white paper stuck to it or anything loose in the mailbox, no remnants of anything stuck to it either. Very strange. I tried contacting customer service and was meet with error messages any which way I tried. I finally gave up and sent an email to one of the editors.
ZeePain! wrote:
This seems like one of those programs that started small, grew incrementally, building internal pressure, and finally barfed all over its source code sneakers. Or something.
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The actual magazine has nothing in it that describes its demise. A cover letter got glued to the face of the magazine. It seems like no one at the magazine knew. All the columnists wrote "...in my next article..." conclusions. Oh, sorry, I looked at the wrong issue laying on the desk. The notice that I received did come with the February 2006 issue, the SECURITY issue. The headlines on the front read Validating C & C++ for Safety and Security Kerberos Authentication Useing GSSAPI & SSPI Recreational Operator Overloading But, of course, when you first get the magazine, all you see is the ugly white paper on front with the letter stating that CUJ has died. "we must lose precision to make significant statements about complex systems." -deKorvin on uncertainty
I haven't got my latest issue of CUJ. I hope I will be getting that today.. It is very sad to hear that CUJ is stopping.. Are you sure or is it some kind of joke??? -Madhu.
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Indeed, new EU regulations related to reciclable paper lead to situation that this publication is no more allowed in EU. Saying this, the reasons of stopping publishing are clear. Unfortunately, I'm also looking for a replacement. :(
Don Miguel wrote:
Indeed, new EU regulations related to reciclable paper lead to situation that this publication is no more allowed in EU. Saying this, the reasons of stopping publishing are clear.
Huh. Unless the EU's banning magazines altogether this doesn't compute. If the regulation's just requiring a different type of paper than currently used there's no reason they couldn't've switched like all the other affected publications will have to do.
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I haven't got my latest issue of CUJ. I hope I will be getting that today.. It is very sad to hear that CUJ is stopping.. Are you sure or is it some kind of joke??? -Madhu.
I don't think they would joke about this. Michael Goodman, Publisher, has his name at the bottom of the letter. The mailing label got affixed to this "we're no longer printing CUJ" letter rather than the issue. The refund address points to Boulder, CO, the mail clearing house of America (maybe the world!). If you get your issue and no letter got glued to the front, post here so that I can call CMP and investigate. "we must lose precision to make significant statements about complex systems." -deKorvin on uncertainty