When standing in front of a mountain that you have to move, it is indeed hard to decide where to begin, but it almost doesn't matter where, it matters that you start moving the first little stone, and not already half of the mountain.
Ok, Confucius was surely not a programmer, but let us start with the first small things that we can do to help you getting better at asking questions: understand why your questions were not well received. Oh, before we do that, let's consider two things:
Stack Overflow is a question and answer site for professional and
enthusiast programmers. It's built and run by you as part of the Stack
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to build a library of detailed answers to every question about
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From The Tour, emphasis mine
What does that mean? First of all it means that we expect questions to be broad enough to help future visitors but not too broad to not be answerable in our format (well, and of course on topic).
This question does not show any research effort; it is unclear or not useful
The downvote button text
This means that you should not only do your research, but that we want to be able to see it. Saying "I google for hours" isn't enough, "I found this and that, but it didn't help me because of whatever" is much better.
Also -- and here is the hard part concerning your question title -- your question must be clear; this is particularly hard when you are not sure what you are looking for, but if you don't know what you really want to ask, how could we know, given that you are using such a low bandwidth form of communication as a textual question.
Now let's have a look at some of your questions.
This question has been closed as a duplicate of What is an undefined reference/unresolved external symbol error and how do I fix it? which is our canonical question for undefined reference errors. This essentially means: you did not do enough research (or we don't know of any). Admittedly finding that question in Stack Overflow is not really easy:
But we can do better:
So learn how to use all kind of search possibilities more efficiently.
Getting back to the error in question, what you should do is: start at the smallest level. Try to understand what an "undefined reference error" really is. Do that by research:
Ok, the canonical question is also here hard to find, but should go through multiple ones, and following the duplicates is also a good idea.
Getting back to the introduction, what would have been a better question to ask? Possibly something like:
I have looked at X and Y what an undefined reference error is, but I do not understand it. I also found <canonical question> but it didn't help me either because of <insert how your case isn't mentioned there and how it differs>.
Well, this question is actually not a good case to show a better question, because I cannot imagine how the canonical question will not answer any of those out there.
Anyways, you want to post code, and you did; but it isn't in a good format. To see what is going on, people have to go through multiple files, and if someone would want to try it on his own to see what happens, they had quite some work to do. In most cases, it is possible to reduce your code to the least amount possible to show what is going on. Do this. Put some effort into presenting your code, and don't just dump all the code you have at us. Most of the code will be irrelevant to the question you are going to ask. And as a positive side effect, in a lot of cases by reducing the amount of code, you will find the reason of the error.
Unfortunately, while even when this question is solved for your code, it is not what we are looking for on this site: It is very unlikely to help future visitors, unless it is uniquely different (it isn't).
Similar case here. You dumped even only a piece of code at us, without trying to narrow it down. Yes, it is hard to do that when you have a class given by a professor that you must use, and cannot easily paste (it surely is huge). But you reduce it to a testcase locally, and then post the testcase and tell us in all detail about the interface of the class.
You also say
I am trying to use the Visual C++ debugger, but I am unfamiliar with it and it isn't giving me much insight.
Well, why don't you start there? You need to learn to debug, it's very essential, maybe more essential than writing code in the first place in some situations. So get used to it. If you have a problem with using it, narrow it down and ask a specific question (of course, try to answer the question yourself beforehand). With basic knowledge of a debugger you should have seen at least:
- where the code is hanging/looping
- what the values are that are used in any loop conditions
And even without a debugger, stuffing some printing statements here and there to see what the code is doing is possible too, and doesn't require any additional skill.
Ok, that question starts with a rather bad title. You may be a beginner, but we don't care, and it doesn't matter. We expect the same effort from everyone. Stating your level of experience usually makes you a target, no matter what level.
Also here, there are lots of possible duplicates that solve the problem, have a look at the "related" bar on the right:
and likely many many more if you go through some search results. Did you notice that list when you created your question? It is constantly changing while you write your question. Pay attention to it. Also here reducing it to a few lines testcase would have made it easier for everyone, and might have given you the right push to discover it on your own.
Well, this question should probably be deleted because
- It is very specific to you and won't help any further visitor
- The problem isn't even in the code you posted!
Look carefully at the code you posted and try to read it from our point of view. We do not know what is
- Boat
- Boat::no_more
- Boat::print
- Boat::size
- Boat::can_place
- Boat::add_item
- Boat::remove_item
- the state (if any) of
boat
Do you really expect us to reason in any way about the code without knowing all these things? We are not psychic, you know...
This would also greatly benefit from an SSCCE. Again this is also a question not very helpful for future visitors. A more helpful version would have been had you asked specifically what a primary-expression is, or anything in that direction, that could help future visitors that face the same error. Also here some of the related questions have the same problem:
Also here, do a search and you will see quite some instances that have the same reason.
Also here you should have gone more to the ground and ask "What does this error mean? Why does it try to call that constructor? I thought I have that constructor on line XXX, why isn't it finding it" etc.
Summary
- Improve your search skills
- Improve your search skills. No, thats not a duplicate. It really appears to me that you are missing obvious duplicates to your questions. I cannot look into your head as for why, but there seems to be a reason why you did not see what I mentioned above. Try to find out why.
- Start at the small things. Don't throw code in here and ask "why am I getting this error for that code". Try to understand error messages. Try to understand what exact syntactic construct is causing the error. Sometimes it might even be necessary to ask in multiple steps to get through some problem. Start with a stone, not with the whole mountain.
- Find some other help resource. We favor Q&A that will help later visitors. We are not a free debugging service. Although it is sometimes interesting to figure out what is causing an error, we hate the gazillionth instance of an undefined reference error. Ask questions that will help you (and others) in the future too by making them a little bit more general. In the question try to actually understand the error, and don't let your goal just be a fix to the code that you can copy paste.
Be curious. Don't do cargo cult programming. When you see some code, try to understand every aspect of it. Don't copy code and then say "but it worked when I wrote the same thing yesterday in another project". Programming is not magic words to throw at a compiler and crossing fingers that it works.
Improve your debugging skills, get used to a debugger (and maybe also a bit printf debugging).