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  • I LOVE UR TYPING SPEED

  • The memory addresses are base 16 numbers..

    If we look at the first one it ends with 9fc. When you add 4 to 9fc that gives you a00.

    The scope of those numbers is from 1-9, and then a-f (a being 10, f being 15).

    When adding 4 to 9fc, it gives us 9fd, 9fe, 9ff, and then we go out of range so we carry 1 over to f, which also makes us carry 1 over to 9, so the value of 9 becomes a (remember - a = 10 in base 16).

    Hope it helps if anyone was wondering - english isn´t my first language so bear with me

  • would you please tell me what compiler are you using? i've been searching for a compiler for years, and I finally found a Mac user who compiles C++. Please reply asap

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  • Muchos gustos senor, gracias. BTW, what are you using there, Apple or Linux?

  • God bless u.

  • thaaaaaaaaanx duuuuuuuude verrrrrrry muchhh

  • This is the first video from your collection that I have viewed, but I have already subscribed. I was looking around for some tutorials and more than anything was impressed how you keep a nice clear formatting structure. I think that shows more than anything that you are programmer to listen to, plus you are a ruddy fast typist.

    Thank you very much for that tutorial..

  • Yes, great video thanks. I'm taking c++ part two, and we are learning pointers and dynamic memory. Cool concepts.

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