How to make it obvious that a function is being accessed from the outside?
This is a C specific question. I am trying to keep everything possible inside the translation unit boundaries, exposing only a few functions through the .h
file. That is, I am giving static
linkage to file-level objects.
How to make it obvious that a function is being accessed from the outside?
This is a C specific question. I am trying to keep everything possible inside the translation unit boundaries, exposing only a few functions through the .h
file. That is, I am giving static
linkage to file-level objects.
How to make it obvious that a function is being accessed from the outside?
This is a C specific question. I am trying to keep everything possible inside the translation unit boundaries, exposing only a few functions through the .h
file. That is, I am giving static
linkage to file-level objects.
How to make it obvious that a function is being accessed from the outside?
This is a C specific question. I am trying to keep everything possible inside the translation unit boundaries, exposing only a few functions through the .h
file. That is, I am giving static
linkage to file-level objects.
How to make it obvious that a function is being accessed from the outside?
This is a C specific question. I am trying to keep everything possible inside the translation unit boundaries, exposing only a few functions through the .h
file. That is, I am giving static
linkage to file-level objects.
Extension method naming convention [closed]
Closed 10 years ago.
Extension method naming convention [closed]
Closed 10 years ago.
Extension method naming convention [closed]
Closed 10 years ago.
Extension method naming convention [closed]
Closed 10 years ago.
Extension method naming convention [closed]
Closed 10 years ago.