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  • A Annabelle

    @JKSH said in Qt Programming Language:

    @mrjj said in Qt Programming Language:

    Hi
    Im wondering about the file extension.
    Its .cs which would indicate a c sharp program
    and not a c++ one ?
    Maybe a wrong template was used to create it ?

    @mrjj is right; you have created a C# project instead of a C++ project. When you create a project, select "Visual C++".

    I can't remember what Visual Studio 2015 is like, but Visual Studio 2017 lets me choose Visual C++ > Windows Desktop > Windows Console Application.

    Here's another screenshot. This time, I actually created a C++ project, but it still says there's an error. 0_1541007381736_537203d4-62e9-49e1-9e39-5c7e079ba05e-image.png

    JonBJ Offline
    JonBJ Offline
    JonB
    wrote on last edited by JonB
    #218

    @Annabelle
    This is to do with the VS/MS compiler. Paste the following line:

    #include "stdafx.h"
    

    into your file, as the first line, somewhere above your existing #include <iostream>.

    Alternatively you can remove a compiler switch (/Yu) in your VS project, but I think the above is easiest.

    A 1 Reply Last reply
    1
    • JonBJ JonB

      @Annabelle
      This is to do with the VS/MS compiler. Paste the following line:

      #include "stdafx.h"
      

      into your file, as the first line, somewhere above your existing #include <iostream>.

      Alternatively you can remove a compiler switch (/Yu) in your VS project, but I think the above is easiest.

      A Offline
      A Offline
      Annabelle
      wrote on last edited by
      #219

      @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

      @Annabelle
      This is to do with the VS/MS compiler. Paste the following line:

      #include "stdafx.h"
      

      into your file, as the first line, somewhere above your existing #include <iostream>.

      Alternatively you remover a compiler switch (/Yu) in your VS project, but I think the above is easiest.

      What exactly is "stdafx"? Is it an initializing parameter?

      JKSHJ 1 Reply Last reply
      0
      • A Annabelle

        @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

        @Annabelle
        This is to do with the VS/MS compiler. Paste the following line:

        #include "stdafx.h"
        

        into your file, as the first line, somewhere above your existing #include <iostream>.

        Alternatively you remover a compiler switch (/Yu) in your VS project, but I think the above is easiest.

        What exactly is "stdafx"? Is it an initializing parameter?

        JKSHJ Offline
        JKSHJ Offline
        JKSH
        Moderators
        wrote on last edited by
        #220

        @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

        What exactly is "stdafx"? Is it an initializing parameter?

        You can find an answer by searching on Google or another search engine. Programmers must use search engines often, so make it a habit.

        Here is an answer: https://stackoverflow.com/questions/2976035/purpose-of-stdafx-h

        Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

        1 Reply Last reply
        1
        • A Offline
          A Offline
          Annabelle
          wrote on last edited by
          #221

          I don't know what I did wrong this time, but here's another screenshot of an error.
          0_1541225135389_7d1ba768-18a7-4ec3-b4aa-26271bc951dc-image.png

          JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • A Annabelle

            I don't know what I did wrong this time, but here's another screenshot of an error.
            0_1541225135389_7d1ba768-18a7-4ec3-b4aa-26271bc951dc-image.png

            JonBJ Offline
            JonBJ Offline
            JonB
            wrote on last edited by JonB
            #222

            @Annabelle
            When you did the paste, this time you have accidentally actually copied the actual line numbers 1 to 6 onto lines 1 to 6. This is in addition to the line numbers which VS shows to the left of every line you write, and your screenreader probably reads out to you. Which means that prior to your #include at line 7 the first 6 lines are unacceptable. You need to delete, or change to blank lines, your first 6 lines.

            When you try to compile code, the very first error is highly significant. Once the compiler hits something erroneous, very often it does not do a great a job at "recovering" from the error such that it gives sensible errors (or not) for whatever follows. So you can end up with loads of "spurious" errors after the first one. Concentrate each time on fixing whatever the very first error reported is, then try compiling again and see where it gets you.

            Now, there is an important thing here in VS which I do not know whether you are aware of/your screenreader tells you about. When we look at the lines you have shown us in the screenshot above, we see the lines the compiler does not like having a "squiggly red underline" shown. For us we can immediately see those and know something is wrong. Does your screenreader tell you about these? In your current code, the very first line (numbered 1) has the actual text of the number 1 on it. Since that is wrong, VS squiggle-red-underlines that 1. It would be very helpful to you if your screenreader can make you aware of such lines, but perhaps it cannot? Also, I believe that if I hovered my mouse over a red-squiggle-underline VS would put up a "tooltip" giving me the error message for what is wrong: again, are you able to be informed about that?

            A 1 Reply Last reply
            2
            • JonBJ JonB

              @Annabelle
              When you did the paste, this time you have accidentally actually copied the actual line numbers 1 to 6 onto lines 1 to 6. This is in addition to the line numbers which VS shows to the left of every line you write, and your screenreader probably reads out to you. Which means that prior to your #include at line 7 the first 6 lines are unacceptable. You need to delete, or change to blank lines, your first 6 lines.

              When you try to compile code, the very first error is highly significant. Once the compiler hits something erroneous, very often it does not do a great a job at "recovering" from the error such that it gives sensible errors (or not) for whatever follows. So you can end up with loads of "spurious" errors after the first one. Concentrate each time on fixing whatever the very first error reported is, then try compiling again and see where it gets you.

              Now, there is an important thing here in VS which I do not know whether you are aware of/your screenreader tells you about. When we look at the lines you have shown us in the screenshot above, we see the lines the compiler does not like having a "squiggly red underline" shown. For us we can immediately see those and know something is wrong. Does your screenreader tell you about these? In your current code, the very first line (numbered 1) has the actual text of the number 1 on it. Since that is wrong, VS squiggle-red-underlines that 1. It would be very helpful to you if your screenreader can make you aware of such lines, but perhaps it cannot? Also, I believe that if I hovered my mouse over a red-squiggle-underline VS would put up a "tooltip" giving me the error message for what is wrong: again, are you able to be informed about that?

              A Offline
              A Offline
              Annabelle
              wrote on last edited by
              #223

              @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

              @Annabelle
              When you did the paste, this time you have accidentally actually copied the actual line numbers 1 to 6 onto lines 1 to 6. This is in addition to the line numbers which VS shows to the left of every line you write, and your screenreader probably reads out to you. Which means that prior to your #include at line 7 the first 6 lines are unacceptable. You need to delete, or change to blank lines, your first 6 lines.

              When you try to compile code, the very first error is highly significant. Once the compiler hits something erroneous, very often it does not do a great a job at "recovering" from the error such that it gives sensible errors (or not) for whatever follows. So you can end up with loads of "spurious" errors after the first one. Concentrate each time on fixing whatever the very first error reported is, then try compiling again and see where it gets you.

              Now, there is an important thing here in VS which I do not know whether you are aware of/your screenreader tells you about. When we look at the lines you have shown us in the screenshot above, we see the lines the compiler does not like having a "squiggly red underline" shown. For us we can immediately see those and know something is wrong. Does your screenreader tell you about these? In your current code, the very first line (numbered 1) has the actual text of the number 1 on it. Since that is wrong, VS squiggle-red-underlines that 1. It would be very helpful to you if your screenreader can make you aware of such lines, but perhaps it cannot? Also, I believe that if I hovered my mouse over a red-squiggle-underline VS would put up a "tooltip" giving me the error message for what is wrong: again, are you able to be informed about that?

              My screenreader can't tell if an underline has a color or is squigly. It can say _ (underline). Is that the mark you're talking about? I'm confused!

              JKSHJ 1 Reply Last reply
              0
              • A Offline
                A Offline
                Annabelle
                wrote on last edited by
                #224

                Here's a screenshot of yet another error. I'm not sure what I did wrong. I deleted the lines with pasted numbers, but even Visual Studio didn't like something I did then.
                0_1541260099015_7152e5c5-4f99-4b63-ab56-23a1c4260150-image.png

                1 Reply Last reply
                0
                • A Annabelle

                  @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                  @Annabelle
                  When you did the paste, this time you have accidentally actually copied the actual line numbers 1 to 6 onto lines 1 to 6. This is in addition to the line numbers which VS shows to the left of every line you write, and your screenreader probably reads out to you. Which means that prior to your #include at line 7 the first 6 lines are unacceptable. You need to delete, or change to blank lines, your first 6 lines.

                  When you try to compile code, the very first error is highly significant. Once the compiler hits something erroneous, very often it does not do a great a job at "recovering" from the error such that it gives sensible errors (or not) for whatever follows. So you can end up with loads of "spurious" errors after the first one. Concentrate each time on fixing whatever the very first error reported is, then try compiling again and see where it gets you.

                  Now, there is an important thing here in VS which I do not know whether you are aware of/your screenreader tells you about. When we look at the lines you have shown us in the screenshot above, we see the lines the compiler does not like having a "squiggly red underline" shown. For us we can immediately see those and know something is wrong. Does your screenreader tell you about these? In your current code, the very first line (numbered 1) has the actual text of the number 1 on it. Since that is wrong, VS squiggle-red-underlines that 1. It would be very helpful to you if your screenreader can make you aware of such lines, but perhaps it cannot? Also, I believe that if I hovered my mouse over a red-squiggle-underline VS would put up a "tooltip" giving me the error message for what is wrong: again, are you able to be informed about that?

                  My screenreader can't tell if an underline has a color or is squigly. It can say _ (underline). Is that the mark you're talking about? I'm confused!

                  JKSHJ Offline
                  JKSHJ Offline
                  JKSH
                  Moderators
                  wrote on last edited by JKSH
                  #225

                  @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

                  My screenreader can't tell if an underline has a color or is squigly. It can say _ (underline). Is that the mark you're talking about?

                  In your latest screenshot, there was a red squiggly line underneath "#include". Did your screenreader announce that? If not, don't worry -- the error is repeated under the Error List pane: "cannot open source Hello World! file "stdafx.h". Did your screenreader announce that?

                  @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

                  Here's a screenshot of yet another error.

                  Change <stdafx.h> to "stdafx.h". In other words, change the angular brackets to double quotation marks.

                  Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

                  A 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • JKSHJ JKSH

                    @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

                    My screenreader can't tell if an underline has a color or is squigly. It can say _ (underline). Is that the mark you're talking about?

                    In your latest screenshot, there was a red squiggly line underneath "#include". Did your screenreader announce that? If not, don't worry -- the error is repeated under the Error List pane: "cannot open source Hello World! file "stdafx.h". Did your screenreader announce that?

                    @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

                    Here's a screenshot of yet another error.

                    Change <stdafx.h> to "stdafx.h". In other words, change the angular brackets to double quotation marks.

                    A Offline
                    A Offline
                    Annabelle
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #226

                    @JKSH said in Qt Programming Language:

                    @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

                    My screenreader can't tell if an underline has a color or is squigly. It can say _ (underline). Is that the mark you're talking about?

                    In your latest screenshot, there was a red squiggly line underneath "#include". Did your screenreader announce that? If not, don't worry -- the error is repeated under the Error List pane: "cannot open source Hello World! file "stdafx.h". Did your screenreader announce that?

                    @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

                    Here's a screenshot of yet another error.

                    Change <stdafx.h> to "stdafx.h". In other words, change the angular brackets to double quotation marks.

                    It seems that when I type #include "stdafx.h", the quotation marks, for some reason, are automatically changed to angular brackets (<>). How do I prevent that from happening?

                    1 Reply Last reply
                    0
                    • A Offline
                      A Offline
                      Annabelle
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #227

                      How's this?

                      0_1541379728064_097a0365-c849-4c61-a942-b48351b6e910-image.png

                      JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                      0
                      • A Annabelle

                        How's this?

                        0_1541379728064_097a0365-c849-4c61-a942-b48351b6e910-image.png

                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonBJ Offline
                        JonB
                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                        #228

                        @Annabelle
                        This looks fault-free, and seems to have run without error! I don't know where the "Hello world" output went though? On that Output tab you have the Show output from combobox set to Debug, you may have to set that to something else to see/hear the program output?

                        A 1 Reply Last reply
                        2
                        • JonBJ JonB

                          @Annabelle
                          This looks fault-free, and seems to have run without error! I don't know where the "Hello world" output went though? On that Output tab you have the Show output from combobox set to Debug, you may have to set that to something else to see/hear the program output?

                          A Offline
                          A Offline
                          Annabelle
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #229

                          @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                          @Annabelle
                          This looks fault-free, and seems to have run without error! I don't know where the "Hello world" output went though? On that Output tab you have the Show output from combobox set to Debug, you may have to set that to something else to see/hear the program output?

                          How do I do that, I wonder? After I make the "Hello World" program, what do I do next?

                          JonBJ JKSHJ 2 Replies Last reply
                          0
                          • A Annabelle

                            @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                            @Annabelle
                            This looks fault-free, and seems to have run without error! I don't know where the "Hello world" output went though? On that Output tab you have the Show output from combobox set to Debug, you may have to set that to something else to see/hear the program output?

                            How do I do that, I wonder? After I make the "Hello World" program, what do I do next?

                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonBJ Offline
                            JonB
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #230

                            @Annabelle
                            Ignore my comment about the Debug tab, I think. The question is: when you run the program, it should output Hello world!, where does that output go to? Does it maybe open a console window, send it there, and then close it as soon as your program finishes, all of which would be near "instantaneous"? It may depend on your project type, I don't know. You may need hep on this from VS C++ people here....

                            A 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • A Annabelle

                              @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                              @Annabelle
                              This looks fault-free, and seems to have run without error! I don't know where the "Hello world" output went though? On that Output tab you have the Show output from combobox set to Debug, you may have to set that to something else to see/hear the program output?

                              How do I do that, I wonder? After I make the "Hello World" program, what do I do next?

                              JKSHJ Offline
                              JKSHJ Offline
                              JKSH
                              Moderators
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #231

                              @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

                              @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                              @Annabelle
                              I don't know where the "Hello world" output went though? On that Output tab you have the Show output from combobox set to Debug, you may have to set that to something else to see/hear the program output?

                              How do I do that, I wonder?

                              When you run your program (Ctrl + F5), a window should pop up and that window should contain the words "Hello world!". The window will close if you press any key while the window has focus.

                              Did JAWS read the contents of that window to you?

                              Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              2
                              • JonBJ JonB

                                @Annabelle
                                Ignore my comment about the Debug tab, I think. The question is: when you run the program, it should output Hello world!, where does that output go to? Does it maybe open a console window, send it there, and then close it as soon as your program finishes, all of which would be near "instantaneous"? It may depend on your project type, I don't know. You may need hep on this from VS C++ people here....

                                A Offline
                                A Offline
                                Annabelle
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #232

                                @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                @Annabelle
                                Ignore my comment about the Debug tab, I think. The question is: when you run the program, it should output Hello world!, where does that output go to? Does it maybe open a console window, send it there, and then close it as soon as your program finishes, all of which would be near "instantaneous"? It may depend on your project type, I don't know. You may need hep on this from VS C++ people here....

                                This is what the output window looks like in a screenshot. 0_1541609206448_6d656a50-ae21-4c35-b9e3-89f42a2c7ce5-image.png
                                What is the meaning of this message?
                                "The program '[2880] Hello World!.exe' has exited with code 0 (0x0)."

                                JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                0
                                • A Annabelle

                                  @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                  @Annabelle
                                  Ignore my comment about the Debug tab, I think. The question is: when you run the program, it should output Hello world!, where does that output go to? Does it maybe open a console window, send it there, and then close it as soon as your program finishes, all of which would be near "instantaneous"? It may depend on your project type, I don't know. You may need hep on this from VS C++ people here....

                                  This is what the output window looks like in a screenshot. 0_1541609206448_6d656a50-ae21-4c35-b9e3-89f42a2c7ce5-image.png
                                  What is the meaning of this message?
                                  "The program '[2880] Hello World!.exe' has exited with code 0 (0x0)."

                                  JonBJ Offline
                                  JonBJ Offline
                                  JonB
                                  wrote on last edited by JonB
                                  #233

                                  @Annabelle

                                  "The program '[2880] Hello World!.exe' has exited with code 0 (0x0)."

                                  It's just Visual Studio letting you know good news! It's telling you that you just ran your program executable (Hello World!.exe), it ran to completion and exited, and it returned an "exit code" of 0 (which is good, is what your code does, but which you don't care about).

                                  My question still remains, however. When that program ran it sent the string Hello World! to its "output" (that's the purpose of this program). Where did that "output" go? (I don't use Visual Studio, and with your project type, so I don't know. @JKSH said earlier:

                                  When you run your program (Ctrl + F5), a window should pop up and that window should contain the words "Hello world!". The window will close if you press any key while the window has focus.
                                  Did JAWS read the contents of that window to you?

                                  So how does this behave for you? Did you get to hear about that output? Did you press a key to close a window which had opened?

                                  A 1 Reply Last reply
                                  1
                                  • JonBJ JonB

                                    @Annabelle

                                    "The program '[2880] Hello World!.exe' has exited with code 0 (0x0)."

                                    It's just Visual Studio letting you know good news! It's telling you that you just ran your program executable (Hello World!.exe), it ran to completion and exited, and it returned an "exit code" of 0 (which is good, is what your code does, but which you don't care about).

                                    My question still remains, however. When that program ran it sent the string Hello World! to its "output" (that's the purpose of this program). Where did that "output" go? (I don't use Visual Studio, and with your project type, so I don't know. @JKSH said earlier:

                                    When you run your program (Ctrl + F5), a window should pop up and that window should contain the words "Hello world!". The window will close if you press any key while the window has focus.
                                    Did JAWS read the contents of that window to you?

                                    So how does this behave for you? Did you get to hear about that output? Did you press a key to close a window which had opened?

                                    A Offline
                                    A Offline
                                    Annabelle
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #234

                                    @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                    @Annabelle

                                    "The program '[2880] Hello World!.exe' has exited with code 0 (0x0)."

                                    It's just Visual Studio letting you know good news! It's telling you that you just ran your program executable (Hello World!.exe), it ran to completion and exited, and it returned an "exit code" of 0 (which is good, is what your code does, but which you don't care about).

                                    My question still remains, however. When that program ran it sent the string Hello World! to its "output" (that's the purpose of this program). Where did that "output" go? (I don't use Visual Studio, and with your project type, so I don't know. @JKSH said earlier:

                                    When you run your program (Ctrl + F5), a window should pop up and that window should contain the words "Hello world!". The window will close if you press any key while the window has focus.
                                    Did JAWS read the contents of that window to you?

                                    So how does this behave for you? Did you get to hear about that output? Did you press a key to close a window which had opened?

                                    @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                    @Annabelle

                                    "The program '[2880] Hello World!.exe' has exited with code 0 (0x0)."

                                    It's just Visual Studio letting you know good news! It's telling you that you just ran your program executable (Hello World!.exe), it ran to completion and exited, and it returned an "exit code" of 0 (which is good, is what your code does, but which you don't care about).

                                    My question still remains, however. When that program ran it sent the string Hello World! to its "output" (that's the purpose of this program). Where did that "output" go? (I don't use Visual Studio, and with your project type, so I don't know. @JKSH said earlier:

                                    When you run your program (Ctrl + F5), a window should pop up and that window should contain the words "Hello world!". The window will close if you press any key while the window has focus.
                                    Did JAWS read the contents of that window to you?

                                    So how does this behave for you? Did you get to hear about that output? Did you press a key to close a window which had opened?

                                    @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                    @Annabelle

                                    "The program '[2880] Hello World!.exe' has exited with code 0 (0x0)."

                                    It's just Visual Studio letting you know good news! It's telling you that you just ran your program executable (Hello World!.exe), it ran to completion and exited, and it returned an "exit code" of 0 (which is good, is what your code does, but which you don't care about).

                                    My question still remains, however. When that program ran it sent the string Hello World! to its "output" (that's the purpose of this program). Where did that "output" go? (I don't use Visual Studio, and with your project type, so I don't know. @JKSH said earlier:

                                    When you run your program (Ctrl + F5), a window should pop up and that window should contain the words "Hello world!". The window will close if you press any key while the window has focus.
                                    Did JAWS read the contents of that window to you?

                                    So how does this behave for you? Did you get to hear about that output? Did you press a key to close a window which had opened?

                                    I didn't hear about the output. When I pressed the shortcut to run the program, it first asked me if I wanted to build it, and I said "Yes". Then it launched the Command Prompt. What's up with that, I wonder?

                                    JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • A Annabelle

                                      @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                      @Annabelle

                                      "The program '[2880] Hello World!.exe' has exited with code 0 (0x0)."

                                      It's just Visual Studio letting you know good news! It's telling you that you just ran your program executable (Hello World!.exe), it ran to completion and exited, and it returned an "exit code" of 0 (which is good, is what your code does, but which you don't care about).

                                      My question still remains, however. When that program ran it sent the string Hello World! to its "output" (that's the purpose of this program). Where did that "output" go? (I don't use Visual Studio, and with your project type, so I don't know. @JKSH said earlier:

                                      When you run your program (Ctrl + F5), a window should pop up and that window should contain the words "Hello world!". The window will close if you press any key while the window has focus.
                                      Did JAWS read the contents of that window to you?

                                      So how does this behave for you? Did you get to hear about that output? Did you press a key to close a window which had opened?

                                      @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                      @Annabelle

                                      "The program '[2880] Hello World!.exe' has exited with code 0 (0x0)."

                                      It's just Visual Studio letting you know good news! It's telling you that you just ran your program executable (Hello World!.exe), it ran to completion and exited, and it returned an "exit code" of 0 (which is good, is what your code does, but which you don't care about).

                                      My question still remains, however. When that program ran it sent the string Hello World! to its "output" (that's the purpose of this program). Where did that "output" go? (I don't use Visual Studio, and with your project type, so I don't know. @JKSH said earlier:

                                      When you run your program (Ctrl + F5), a window should pop up and that window should contain the words "Hello world!". The window will close if you press any key while the window has focus.
                                      Did JAWS read the contents of that window to you?

                                      So how does this behave for you? Did you get to hear about that output? Did you press a key to close a window which had opened?

                                      @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                      @Annabelle

                                      "The program '[2880] Hello World!.exe' has exited with code 0 (0x0)."

                                      It's just Visual Studio letting you know good news! It's telling you that you just ran your program executable (Hello World!.exe), it ran to completion and exited, and it returned an "exit code" of 0 (which is good, is what your code does, but which you don't care about).

                                      My question still remains, however. When that program ran it sent the string Hello World! to its "output" (that's the purpose of this program). Where did that "output" go? (I don't use Visual Studio, and with your project type, so I don't know. @JKSH said earlier:

                                      When you run your program (Ctrl + F5), a window should pop up and that window should contain the words "Hello world!". The window will close if you press any key while the window has focus.
                                      Did JAWS read the contents of that window to you?

                                      So how does this behave for you? Did you get to hear about that output? Did you press a key to close a window which had opened?

                                      I didn't hear about the output. When I pressed the shortcut to run the program, it first asked me if I wanted to build it, and I said "Yes". Then it launched the Command Prompt. What's up with that, I wonder?

                                      JonBJ Offline
                                      JonBJ Offline
                                      JonB
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #235

                                      @Annabelle
                                      You wrote:

                                      Then it launched the Command Prompt.

                                      It is probably in that Command Prompt window that I would expect the text of Hello World! to have been output. Is that possible?

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                                      0
                                      • JonBJ JonB

                                        @Annabelle
                                        You wrote:

                                        Then it launched the Command Prompt.

                                        It is probably in that Command Prompt window that I would expect the text of Hello World! to have been output. Is that possible?

                                        A Offline
                                        A Offline
                                        Annabelle
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #236

                                        @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                        @Annabelle
                                        You wrote:

                                        Then it launched the Command Prompt.

                                        It is probably in that Command Prompt window that I would expect the text of Hello World! to have been output. Is that possible?

                                        JAWS doesn't show anything in the Command Prompt. If the text was shown, I'd be able to read it with the left and right arrow keys.

                                        JonBJ JKSHJ 2 Replies Last reply
                                        0
                                        • A Annabelle

                                          @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                          @Annabelle
                                          You wrote:

                                          Then it launched the Command Prompt.

                                          It is probably in that Command Prompt window that I would expect the text of Hello World! to have been output. Is that possible?

                                          JAWS doesn't show anything in the Command Prompt. If the text was shown, I'd be able to read it with the left and right arrow keys.

                                          JonBJ Offline
                                          JonBJ Offline
                                          JonB
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #237

                                          @Annabelle
                                          At this point, wait for somebody helpful to try just what you have in Visual Studio and explain what it is they see about where the output goes.

                                          1 Reply Last reply
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