#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main ()
{
[Code].....
the point of this code is to increase character by 1 (so from a to b in this case). The underlined line is the line that the system is rejecting at the moment (but there may be other issues).
I had this question for a while - is it possbile (not intended, but if this "error" can occur) to actually increase AND decrease integer with ANY operation at the same time, so the result will be screwed integer? like this
int a = 0; //some code a++; //meanwhile at the very same time, not the same code, so another thread or something a -= 5
if it would go normally, the a would == -4, however is there any way that it will screw itself, and the "a" will be -5, or 1, or just will be somehow broken?
So, I've made programs like Prime number searchers and such. But the problem is if I use an int or long int variable for the program I am limited by the variable size. I can't search through numbers larger than their memory size. So my question is: Is there a way to allocate memory to a single variable, NOT AN ARRAY, so I can make a variable as many bytes as I want?
That code should make the size of the pointer (how many chars it can store) bigger but when i run it it show always 3 char positions while it should show N*M.
Code: #include <stdio.h>#include <stdlib.h> int main(void) { int M, N, P, i; scanf ("%d %d", &M, &N); P = M * N; char *c = malloc(P * sizeof(char));
how we will increase the size of an arry during program execution. eg if the size of an array is 40 and during prog exexution we want to increase the size of an arry ,what is the procedure.
I'm working on a project, and can't seem to get the project to get the triangle variable to increase when the conditions are met. I need this number to be accurate so I can work out the probability.
Experiments that are either too expensive or too dangerous to perform are often simulated on a computer when the computer is able to provide a good representation of the experiment. Find out how to call the random-number generator (usually a function returning a floating point value in the range 0 to 1) for your C++ system. (Look up the functions rand and srand in the library cstdlib on the website cplusplus.com). Write a program that uses the random-number generator to simulate the dropping of glass rods that break into three pieces.
The purpose of the experiment is to estimate the probability that the lengths of the three pieces are such that they might form the sides of a triangle. For the purposes of this experiment, you may assume that the glass rod always breaks into three pieces. If you use the line segment 0 to 1 (on the real number line) as a mathematical model of the glass rod, a random-number generator (function) can be used to generate two numbers between 0 and 1 representing the coordinates of the breaks. The triangle inequality (the sum of the lengths of two sides of a triangle are always greater than the length of the third side) may be used to test the length of each piece against the lengths of the other two pieces.
To estimate the probability that the pieces of the rod form a triangle, you'll need to repeat the experiment many times and count the number of times a triangle can be formed from the pieces. The probability estimate is the number of successes divided by the total number of rods dropped. Your program should prompt the user for the number of rods to drop and allow the experiment to be repeated. Use a sentinel value of 21 to hale execution of the program.
I'm having a problem with my homework. The task is to write a program that will take time and date typed by user, and increase it by 1 minute. I should write 3 functions - first calls second function that updates time and calls third function, if time is 00:00.Time update works, but date update does not.My whole written code:
Code:
#include<stdio.h> struct DateAndTime { struct date { int day; int month; int year;
[code]....
I should check if inputs are numbers only, so I tried including isdigit function from ctype.h library, but that didn't work either, after I was trying it for a good hour or so, but I kinda rage quit that...
The program is supposed to have a method called Hitscore that adds a score between 0 and 1000 inputted by the user to the total score and increases level by one and print the score to the screen and which level they last completed after each entry . Have the user continue inputting scores to the program until the gamer has finished all 10 levels. After 10 levels, use a method you create called PassScore to have the program compare the score to avgscore (5000). If the score is less than avgscore, have the code respond "You are not angry at all. " if it is above avgscore, then have it respond "You seem quite angry, calm down. " and if it is exactly 5000, have it respond "Average, just average. "
//Angrybird.h #ifndef ANGRYBIRD_H #define ANGRYBIRD_H using namespace std; class Angrybird { public:
I'm a little lost with this program. The idea is to dynamically allocate an array and increase its size every time a new integer is inputted by the user. I believe it is a memory leak but as we have just started learning this I'm not sure how to recognise it. Sometimes I can input as many integers as I want other times 2 or 3 before it crashes. When I can input enough values i exit the loop and send it to the sort function and mean calculator function, all works fine there except the last number inputted becomes this huge value not hexadecimal though... As such I'm at a loss as what to look at next, so here you go:
I have a paradigm in a loop of queues of a vector,if a condition is true,increase sizes of the queue of that particular queue in the loop of queues, if condition is false, the queuesize is left as such in loop of queues. After this operation i need to search the queue sizes of all queues and enqueue in the shortest queue.
I've made a code to check whether or not a save file has been created correctly, but for some reason it always returns this line: readdata[qa]=='1' as true. in which qa is the counter I use in a for loop and readdata is a character array consisting of 50 characters that are either 0, 1 or 2.
this is the entire code:
#include <iostream> #include <fstream> #include <string> using namespace std;
[Code]....
at first is also went wrong at line 22 and also returned that as true, but then I added brackets and it worked.
I am trying to concatenate two words from a file together. ex: "joe" "bob" into "joe bob". I have provided my function(s) below. I am somehow obtaining the terminal readout below. I have initialized my memory (I have to use dynamic, dont suggest fixing that). I have set up my char arrays (I HAVE TO USE CHAR ARRAYS (c-style string) DONT SUGGEST STRINGS) I know this is a weird way to do this, but it is academic. I am currently stuck. My file will read in to my tempfName and templName and will concatenate correctly into my tempName, but I am unable to correctly get into my (*playerPtr).name.
/* this is my terminal readout joe bob <- nothing is put into (*playerPtr).name, why not? joe bob joe bob seg fault*/ /****************************************************************/ //This is here to show my struct/playerInit
I have a file which contains a year and the name of an associated file to be read. I need to extract the data in the txt file and perform some calculations.
( year data file) 2004 2004data.txt 2005 2005data.txt 2006 2006data.txt
Here is what I do. I first declare "char yeardata" and then pass "2004data.txt" to it. Then I call yeardata in ifstream to extract the data inside the file "2004data.txt". The problem is that char yeardata is not constant so I cannot pass the file to it. It doesn't work if I change "char yeardata" to "const char yeardata".
Code: int oldnewcomp_temp(char* lcfile) { using namespace std;
I am having problems copying outputs of the above code into other unsigned char other[32]. I need to keep the output of dev/urandom for backup. But, when I try to assign the values by memcpy(other, key, 32), the values do not match. The same problem happens by assigning values index by index in a loop.
I'm trying to write a program that takes input from the user (thats a char) and outputs it to the monitor in hex form.The program is meant to continuously take input from the user then output to the monitor in hex form until an EOF is detected this triggers the program to close.The following code does this except that I get a lower case 'a' at the end of each output.
example:
input from user: ABC output to monitor: 41 42 43 a
While reading a file character by character,using getchar( ),we must use a large data type(like int) to check for EOF,not char.But here my program(taking char) works fine: