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12:01
Hi there
You can use std::vector<int> MyNumbers { 1,2,3,4,5 };
That will work for dynamic numbers of elements. Vectors automatically grow if needed
ok just wonder; book says this is static arrays
const int ARRAY_LENGTH = 5;
int MyNumbers [ARRAY_LENGTH] = {34, 56, -21, 5002, 365};
Arrays declared this far are called static arrays as the length of the
array is fixed by the programmer at compile-time. This array cannot
take more data than what the programmer has specified. It also
does not consume any less memory if left half-used or unused.
but I can use it as dynamic so array initiliazing can change on runtime like
int main()
{
int num;
cout << "Your number:"<<endl;
cin >> num;
int dizi[num];
return 0;
}
O hi. Missed your (unreadable) wall of code
sorry about that
uhh how it can be?
its running on my compiler
12:16
@mekici ? it's a live workspace site, if that's what you mean. Beats posting code in chat. But regardless, copy the code to see how it works locally!
can you check again?
its working on my compiler
i m using codeblock
code::blocks
IDE
Yeah yeah, no worries. I know what that is. It uses gcc (windows or linux?)
@mekici How can I check what it does on your computer?
WINDOWS
its windows
no i mean check the site lol
@mekici What about the site? What you edit, doesn't show here unless you save+link
You could use pastebin.com, gist.github.com, ideone.com or codepad.org if you are more comfortable
ohh ok its not big deal, that code works on my compiler yes it use gcc windows (code::blocks)
#include <iostream>

int main()
{
std::cout << "Your number:"<< std::endl;

int num;
std::cin >> num;
int dizi[num];
return 0;
}
12:23
In case you prefer it to work with input: ideone.com/BuM8t
@mekici So, what is the question again?
(BTW, I think it works because gcc allows VLA which is a non-standard extension borrowed from C99, not C++)
35
A: Variable length arrays in C++?

Johannes Schaub - litbThere recently was a discussion about this kicked off in usenet: Why no VLAs in C++0x. I agree with those people that seem to agree that having to create a potential large array on the stack, which usually has only little space available, isn't good. The argument is, if you know the size before...

ok my question is:
that variable "num" can change at runtime right? so i can change give that number to my array up to user options. so that means my array can initilase as dynamic at runtime right?
but book says you cant, says :
Arrays declared this far are called static arrays as the length of the
array is fixed by the programmer at compile-time. This array cannot
take more data than what the programmer has specified. It also
does not consume any less memory if left half-used or unused.
@mekici Precisely. The linked answer explains that in-depth. You are using a nonstandard extension. If you insist, you could disable that using a compiler flag (-fpedantic should work, I guess)
hmm ok so this is compiler issue :)
anyway can you suggest which compiler i have to use during learning process of c++
my os is windows so code::blocks seems ok
@mekici No, you hav an issue with that compiler :) The compiler is being helpful, and you object because you got confused.
@mekici Just compiler -Wall -pedantic if you must. I'm pretty sure it will reject the code then
hmm ok lemme try
anyway
thanks for your
help
12:35
> The particular standard is used by -pedantic to identify which features are
GNU extensions given that version of the standard. For example -std=gnu90 -pedantic would warn about C++ style // comments, while -std=gnu99 -pedantic would not.
I'm trying it out
@mekici Yup it says:
test.cpp|11 col 17| warning: ISO C++ forbids variable length array 'dizi' [-Wvla]
hmm ok
@mekici So, -Wvla should be enough to disable just that.
I recommend running with -Wall -pedantic -ansi anyways to avoid future confusion with non-portable language constructs!
thanks
now i m thinking how i add that to codeblocks
:)
ok i m trying
well, i couldnt do that
:)
where i put that line
i will put
I m putting that
-Wall -pedantic
settings => compiler
=>batch builds
12:46
@mekici Yeah i remember seeing it somewhere in the flags (large list box with checboxes) as well. I hate IDEs for that reason: I rather type / paste actual commands
:) ok
13:35
well hi again
i still cant find how i add that option to codeblock :s
anyway thanks all your help! god bless you
 
9 hours later…
22:34
@mekici Can't you just 'not use VLAs' now that you know why it is being accepted? IME the MSVC compiler is a lot more restrictive. MSVC++ Express 2010 is free for download

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