Hey everyone, does anyone know how I can create a new variable of type const char ** from another char ** variable? This is because I need to pass a non-const to a function that will populate it, but then pass it to another function that only accepts consts.
The problem is that the conversion is incorrect. It breaks const-correctness which leads to errors in the program that the compiler cannot catch.
Basically the char ** allows you to modify the char whereas the const char ** allows you to make the const char * point to a thing that cannot be modified. And then stuff breaks.
The author of said comment wrote: "Usually, the user of your class would supply whatever data you need to initialize the field. There is no way of knowing what type ItemType will be."
I'm new to C++, can someone tell me why the compile couldn't resolve at compile-time both a someClass::someClass(int x) and someClass::someClass(char x) or use someClass::someClass(T x) and then switch on the runtime type with typeid?
@ZephyrPellerin the point is that the OP is trying to initialize the member with some default value, because he wants the class to be default constructible for some unknown reason
and the comment tells him not to do that, and just make his class have a one-arg constructor
humorously enough, he responded with a comment and gave a completely different response, but your answer is more satisfying (and seemingly more correct)
a.) all std::string functions operate in-place b.) 'Pros' and 'ffff' are multicharacter literals, a.k.a. nobody ever uses this c.) the replace function replaces what's at indices [pos, pos+length) with a different string
I'm not particularly surprised with you getting confused because the interface of std::string is fairly abysmal
// print out content: std::cout << "myvector contains:"; for (std::vector<int>::iterator it=myvector.begin(); it!=myvector.end(); ++it) std::cout << ' ' << *it;
if i am using "using namespace std" i can replace" std:: " so can i replace for (std::vector<int>::iterator it=myvector.begin(); it!=myvector.end(); ++it) with (vector<int>::iterator it=myvector.begin(); it!=myvector.end(); ++i);?
I've been told by others on numerous occasions that my teacher's advice of exercising using namespace std in code was wrong. Hence, we should use std::cout and std::cin.
Why is using namespace std considered bad practice? Is it really that inefficient or risk declaring ambiguous variables (vari...
int i; // set some values: for ( i=1; i<10; i++) myvector.push_back(i); for(auto it = myvector.begin();it != myvector.end();++it) std::cout << ' ' << *it;
this worked
but cout<<myvector[i] didn't
@milleniumbug Thanks a lot for bearing my doubts and answering them patiently.
just made sure that my text had proper unique tags to replace
is any1 familiar with json library here?
I'm geting feedback from server that looks like this ["stuff","lol"] that is a string. I'd like to now decode it in to json object... in pyton I would just do obj = json.loads(string) but how can I do it in c++ ?
Also filenames should be std::wstring else your program will crash and burn, because filenames names can have special characters and also their max path length is hard to predict.