std::ifstream file("log.txt"); char ar[256]; while( fStrm.getline(ar,256) ) { ... }. Now is there any way to get rid of the char array and use std::string instead.
a thought: macros tend to use things like "do {} while(0)" to get single statements. Wouldn't just enclosing the stuff in curly braces accomplish the same thing, since (at least in c++, idk about c) they create their own scope without any accompanying logic constructs?
I mean, I assume there's something I'm missing otherwise it would already be done that way.
In general there's not much you can do with a class declaration (that is not also a definition) like class foo; other than have pointers and references to that type, but you can't use members just yet since they are not visible in a sense.
Very good try. There's just one tiny thing wrong, which is this:
p <= 3
Pointers are just some number which represents a memory address. When you do p = alph, you're not setting p to 0, you're setting it to point to the same address as alph. When looping over an array with pointers, you hav...
Very good try. There's just one tiny thing wrong, which is this:
p <= 3
Pointers are just some number which represents a memory address. When you do p = alph, you're not setting p to 0, you're setting it to point to the same address as alph. When looping over an array with pointers, you hav...