Click here to Skip to main content
15,893,814 members
Articles / Programming Languages / C++

Using MC.exe, message resources and the NT event log in your own projects

Rate me:
Please Sign up or sign in to vote.
4.93/5 (138 votes)
18 May 200314 min read 545.1K   3.9K   170  
A tutorial that shows how to integrate mc.exe in the build environment of Visual Studio and use it for event logging and string resources.
// stdafx.h : include file for standard system include files,
//  or project specific include files that are used frequently, but
//      are changed infrequently
//

#if !defined(AFX_STDAFX_H__14397EA1_F5CC_481B_AD53_42379A50552C__INCLUDED_)
#define AFX_STDAFX_H__14397EA1_F5CC_481B_AD53_42379A50552C__INCLUDED_

#if _MSC_VER > 1000
#pragma once
#endif // _MSC_VER > 1000


#include <windows.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <tchar.h>

// TODO: reference additional headers your program requires here

//{{AFX_INSERT_LOCATION}}
// Microsoft Visual C++ will insert additional declarations immediately before the previous line.

#endif // !defined(AFX_STDAFX_H__14397EA1_F5CC_481B_AD53_42379A50552C__INCLUDED_)

By viewing downloads associated with this article you agree to the Terms of Service and the article's licence.

If a file you wish to view isn't highlighted, and is a text file (not binary), please let us know and we'll add colourisation support for it.

License

This article has no explicit license attached to it but may contain usage terms in the article text or the download files themselves. If in doubt please contact the author via the discussion board below.

A list of licenses authors might use can be found here


Written By
Germany Germany
Daniel Lohmann (daniel@losoft.de) is Assistant Professor at the Distributed Systems and Operating Systems department at Friedrich-Alexander-University Erlangen-Nuremberg, Germany. His main research topic is the design of a highly customizable and scalable operating system product line for deeply embedded systems using static configuration and aspect-oriented techniques. Before joining Universität Erlangen he worked as a freelance trainer and consultant for NT system programming, advanced C++ programming and OOA/OOD. He is interested in upcoming programming techniques like aspect-oriented programming, generative programming and C++ meta coding and has written some nice and handy tools for Windows NT which you can download at his web site.

Comments and Discussions