C++ :: Guessing Game With Numbers Between 1 And 100
Apr 22, 2014
I neeed to Create a guessing game with numbers between 1 and 100. The loop will never exit until the condition is met. The user will continually guess and display:
Sorry Too Low
Sorry Too High
You Guessed Right
** YOU MUST USE THE BOOLEAN VARIABLE… when the boolean is true, the loop will exit **
This is what i got so far;
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main() {
//Declaring Variables
int guess=50,x;
"Write a program to play a numbers guessing game. The user thinks of a number between 1 and 100 and your program asks questions to figure out what the number is (e.g., "Is the number you are thinking of less than 50?"). Your program should be able to identify the number after asking no more than seven questions. Hint: Use < and <= opeartors and the if-else construct."
What I've managed so far, but what I have seems to be lacking
I am completely stuck when assigning values to and passing variables around. It seems that the problem occurs with fscanf function. I have also guessed that it might be passing and reading it as a character, even though I said it will be an integer, and tried atoi() with no luck. I troubleshooted the error as I tried to print the given values after I assign it. I am doing this for a friend I have recently been programming django, so I am completely out of the loop when it comes to C. where I am assigning converting passing in a wrong way?
The question for homework is Create an application that generates a random number in the range of 1 through 100 and asks the user to guess what the number is. If the user’s guess is higher than the random number, the program should display “Too high, try again.” If the user’s guess is lower than the random number, the program should display “Too low, try again.” If the user guesses the number, the application should congratulate the user and then generate a new random number so the game can start over"
I have no errors in my code, but when it compiles it and I type the number in, and hit calculate nothing happens at all. Im baffled. Here is my code.
using System; using System.Collections.Generic; using System.ComponentModel; using System.Data;
when it comes to programming. I was trying to make a simple letter guessing game where the user has 6 chances to guess the letter V. The command prompt works fine until the user enters 'y' to play. It repeats my HIGH & LOW statements twice before letting me guess again. It's all a mess.
I am relatively new to C programming, and I am encountering numerous issues with this program that I cant seem to figure out how to fix.
First, when the user selects the arithmetic game, I keep on getting different incorrect answers from the arithgame function. For example, when I am presented with the question 3+2=_, sometimes the function claims the answer is the first number, 3, and other times the function gives me a multiplication answer, 6. This happens in both the addition and multiplication parts (ie. the multiplication answer will either be the first number or the addition answer).
Additionally, I cant figure out why my guessing game loops forever, rather than letting me guess until I get a correct answer.
I'm playing with a guessing game program as a personal exercise, but I'm missing a vital piece - the binary search-style code.
"Have the program initially guess 50, and have it ask the user whether the guess is high, low, or correct. If, say, the guess is low, have the next guess be halfway between 50 and 100, that is, 75. If that guess is high, let the next guess be halfway between 75 and 50, and so on."
(We're assuming that the user won't cheat.) I need the average, essentially. As in, (50 + 75) / 2 = 63.. but when I use this method of "guess = (high+low)/2, it just keeps giving me 50. I can't remember what operators I should use to increment the program's response based on the user's input. It's literally a binary search, that needs to go where those TODOs are. If low was chosen, it would have to start by being at least 51, to 100, so I'd have to set that, then find the average.
Code: #include <stdio.h> Code: #include <ctype.h> int main(int argc, const char * argv[]) { int low; int high; int guess; int response; int toupper ( int );
Basically i need to make a number guessing game where user thinks of a numbver from 1 - 100 and the machine will try to guess it in the least number of times. Once it guesses the number it will also say how many tries it took to guess.
My code so far is
#include<iostream> using namespace std; const int MAX = 100; int main() { char ch;
cout << "Think of an integer number between 0 and " << MAX<<endl; cout << "Write it down on a piece of paper then hit a key to continue"<<endl<<endl; cin.get(ch);
I'm making a guessing game program and i've encountered this error of stack around variable ' ' was corrupted. I tried to replace the variable into others but still the same. So is there anyway to solve it?I only know how to use stdio.h so preferably solution using it. Here is my program:
#include <stdio.h> #include <iostream> void main() { char choice; int num[4][4]={2,1,3,4,5,6,7,8,9,10,11,12,13,14,15,2}; int i,k,row,col,x,y; int Array[4][4];
[Code] ....
The words in bold is the error part of the program...
So I made a simple letter guessing game a while ago and I want to make a simple edit. If the user does not press 'y' or 'n' and instead inputs an invalid letter, I want the printf's in the main function to loop until the user chooses to play or quit.
And I want the choices to show up again at the end of a game. Basically I want it to keep asking if the user wants to play until the user chooses to exit. Here's my code:
#include <stdio.h> #include <time.h> #define MAX_GUESSES 6 void Instructions ( ); //displays instructions, returns nothing char Play ( ); //this functions plays one game, returns W if user wins & L if user runs out of tries
[Code] .....
I'm thinking of making a separate function (like Instructions and Play) ... But how would I link the user input back to the main function?
So I'm making my first program w/ C++ and its a game guessing game. I've learned how to use booleans, chars, strings, if/else, loops, and input. Anything past that I dont know. I've gotten my game to work properly except for the fact that when you guess incorrectly, the program closes. I want the program to go to the beginning of the program again so the user can restart. So far i've gotten the loop to beginning thing to work but not well. It'll only repeat twice before closing again and it'll say the user got the wrong answer even if it was correct. Here's my code
#include <iostream> #include <string> #include <random> #include<ctime> using namespace std;
OK, so the program is working minus the play again loop. I even tried a goto statement for it but no luck. Basically what its doing is after the game runs its course it asks if you would like to play again? If you hit Y it starts over but if you it N it starts over. I want it to out put thank you for playing and close after user hits a button.
// C// Guess My Number // The classic number guessing game
#include <iostream> #include <cstdlib> #include <ctime> using namespace std;
I'm currently creating a guessing game program where the user will be asked to guess the computer generated number. Once the program is finished, at the end the user will be asked if they want to play again. If the user types "Y or Y" the program will loop and when the user types "n or N" it will not loop. Check out my code below.
#include<iostream.h> #include<stdio.h> #include<dos.h> #include<stdlib.h> #include<conio.h> #define g gotoxy void main(){ int a,l,b,guess,row,col,answer,num,clue=5;
I have a program that stores current a low numbers. The Object is to Store the low number every time time one is presented. so say I start the function the first number is the low number. but the trouble im having it once the function is called again it starts over(low number). Is there a way I can keep the function value once the function is called again? Any better way of doing this while keeping function in a class?
double a; class rff{ public: void FGH() { doubleb=0; cout<< "pick a number"<<endl;
I'm trying to develop a deeper knowledge of how loops work (and what better way todo that than a dynamic password guesser). My main problem lies with the conflict between data types, as I try to point to a char at a specific index position of the password guess.
See in my code (at line 57):
Code: #include <iostream> #include <iterator> #include <algorithm> #include <string> #include <cstdlib> #include <iomanip> using namespace std; string AlphaNum("abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzABCDEFGHIJKLMNOPQRSTUVWXYZ0123456789");//62 possible characters int size = AlphaNum.length();//should be 62
[Code] ....
This is annoying, because strings are arrays of characters themselves.
I'm working on my first video game. So far I have a few classes in the game starting with the Game class which includes a list of GameObjects (another class). There are several classes that inherit from GameObjects used to implement things like bullets, explosions, various enemy types, etc.
The game essentially iterates through the list of GameObjects to update/render them. I would like to provide access to the Game's list of GameObjects inside another class (like the Bullet class) so I can put new objects on the list. For example, when a bullet hits, I want to add an explosion to the Game's GameObject list it can be updated/rendered.
How this should be setup? I was considering adding a pointer to the Game or GameObject list to the GameObject class (and methods to access it), but I was wondering if there is a better way to set this up?
I would like to make a program for calculating the total price of a game station, and a game. I made a program like this for just the price of a game in class, but I want to make one that does the game system as well.
User enters sentence "The Smiths have two daughters, three sons, two cats and one dog." (The numbers may change depending on what the user chooses to enter. He told us the range would be from zero to nine.) and we have to convert the written numbers within the sentence into actual decimal numbers and print out the new sentence. Ex. The Smiths have 2 daughters, 3 sons...etc.
I have written the following bit of code which reads the string and finds all the "written numbers" but I am not sure how to proceed from there. I am stuck on how to print out the new sentence with the converted numbers as my professor mentioned something about creating the new string using dynamic memory allocation.
Code: #include <stdio.h>#include <string.h> int main () { char A[100]; int length = 0; int i;
Find all the prime numbers between a given pair of numbers. Numbers should be read in from an input file called "numbers.txt" and find all the prime numbers between them. Store the prime numbers in an array, then sort the array from greatest to least. Display the array before and after the sort.
I'm stuck on how to put the prime numbers into an array.
The input file has the numbers 1 & 100.
Here's what I have so far.
#include <iostream> #include <fstream> using namespace std; int main() { ifstream fin; fin.open("numbers.txt");
I'm working on this program that I have to design a class Numbers that can be used to translate whole numbers to the English description of the number.
Now this is what I got so far:
#include <iostream> #include <string> using namespace std; class Numbers { private: int number; static string ones[]; static string tens[];
[Code] ....
The program seems to work. However its not giving me the right number description,
Example:
Please enter the amount you would like translated into words: 5 six dollars please enter another number: 10 eleven dollars please enter another number: 20 thirty dollars please enter another number: 30 forty dollars please enter another number: 100 two hundred dollars please enter another number: 150 two hundred sixty dollars please enter another number: 500 six hundred dollars please enter another number: 1000 two thousand dollars please enter another number: