No.
Nobody discovered MS VC++ 6.0. It was developed by Microsoft (hence the abbreviation MS) and was first released by them in 1998. It has been superseded several times since then, with VC++ version 7 (2002), 7.1 (2003), 8 (2005), 9 (2008), 10 (2010) and now version 11 (2012).
Yes, but it is not a pure object-oriented language. Since C++ evolved from C, it still makes use of primitives which are not part of the object-oriented paradigm.
Project - Settings - Link Tab Click on folder that has header files and librarys in the tree view Push OK
#include<iostream> #include<time.h> #include<string.h> #include<sys/timeb.h> int main() { _tzset(); char buff[128]; _strtime_s (buff, 128); std::cout << "\Time: " << buff[0]; }
No.
Virtually every major application by Microsoft is developed using VC++, including Windows itself.
Yes. Microsoft Visual C++ is the correct name, but it is often abbreviated to MSVC++ or just VC++. They are all the same.
There are several free C++ development suites. One is Microsoft's Express editions. http://www.microsoft.com/express/vc/
The word "tuna" is a VC V word, where V represents a vowel and C a consonant.
VC 21655.8
vasoconstrict
APOEL VC was created in 1926.
Vc v
vc/v
Vc v
vc/v