C++ :: Print Stars Function - Corresponding To Array Index Size
Nov 24, 2014
I am having trouble getting the stars to output correctly in the printStars function. the final output should look something like this:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int readArray(int input[], int size);
void printArray(int input[], int count);
void printStars(int input[], int size);
I'm having trouble with my for loop near the end of the program was able to print everything else.
Sample Output:
*** end of 27610_Arrays04.cpp program ***
City City Points --------------- 1---5----10---15---20 Belvidere ********** Freeport ******** Byron ************ Stillman Valley *************** Rockford *********
*** end of 27610_Arrays04.cpp program ***
Input:
TODO #1: complete the coding of the points array An integer array of 5 numbers: 10, 8, 12, 15, 9
TODO #2: complete the coding of the cities string array An string of 5 city names intialized to: "Belvidere", "Freeport", "Byron", "Stillman Valley", "Rockford"
Compile-time arrays with initialization lists.
Processing & Output:
TODO #3: complete the coding of the call to the printStars() function
TODO #4: code the printStars() function
#include <iostream> #include <iomanip> #include <string> using namespace std; int main(void) { /* declarations ------------------------------------------------*/
Basically i want to input a number for example 123456 and get back how many 7's are in the input number and also to print out that same number with stars in between like this *1*2*3*4*5*6*. Here is what i have so far:
#include <iostream> using namespace std; int countSeven(int x){ if(x == 7)return 1; int c = 0; while(x/10 > 9)c++; return countSeven(x/10)+1;
when i compile it does not do what i tell it it just tells me there are 0 7's in the input number no matter how many there really are...
I want to create a vertical histogram in my code. I already made it go vertical but not the way I want it.
Example: I want it like this:
Range1 Range2 Range3 Range4
And asterisks under each one, depending on the user input. (My code is below and doing it on here doesn't make it come out correctly)
But what I've managed to do is this:
Range1 * * *
Range2 * *
Range3 * * * *
Range4 * *
Which I don't want. I want everything else to stay pretty much the same since I can only use some features such as Arrays and really basic functions.
Here is my code: (Worked fine last time I used it and I am doing it on Visual Studio 2010 (at uni) and 2013 (on my laptop)).
#include <iostream> //Start of code using namespace std; int MarkValueInput; //Mark entered by user //Counter variables for ranges in While Loop int counterlow; //Counter for low range int countermidlow; //Counter for mid-low range int countermidhigh; //Counter for mid-high range int counterhigh; //Counter for high range
I am attempting to write a program " that has a function that is passed an array of int and its size, and with that it prints out only the numbers that are above average. "
I have included my code so far, but I am only getting one value as output, and that value seems to be completely off. I keep trying, but I am really stuck.
#include <iostream> using namespace std; int average(int values[],int size); int main(){ int size; int values[] = {1,2,3,4,5,6};
[Code] ....
Added the floats in the average() function. But there is still a value problem.
comparing with screen size the height is bigger but lenght is smaller. I don't understand.
I can understand that different printers process the fonts in different way and then to have different lenghts. That's not the problem. The problem is I need to simulate in screen the same behaviour i will have on printer because these texts are being aligned in the document, and I don't want to see that the text si aligned different in text than in paper.
What can I do to render the text on screen with the same size I will have on the printer? Print preview is doing it. Should I change the font parameters? is something related with pixels per inch?
I'm trying to create a function that determines the largest value in the array and then outputs the value and index. I want to values in the array to be random so I tried using the rand function, although I'm not sure where I'm supposed to put it. My main problem (I think) is outputting the correct values...
#include <iostream> #include <cstdlib> #include <ctime> using namespace std; void lastLargestIndex (int numbers[], int arraySize); int main(int argc, char** argv) { int number, arraySize = 50;
I have an assignment which requires me to do the following:
Required to write a function that finds an integer in an array and returns its corresponding index. The function must be called findNumber. It must have FOUR parameters:
- The first parameter is the array to be searched - The second parameter is the integer to be found within the array - The third parameter is the size of the array - The fourth parameter is an integer that indicates whether the array is sorted. A value of 1 means the array is sorted; a value of zero means the array is not sorted.
Since a function can only return one value(To return the position of a required integer in an array in this instance) I have tried to make use of pointers to try and return a value stating whether the array is sorted or not.This is my code : (It compiles perfectly but it does not produce any outputs)
Code:
#include <stdio.h> #define SIZE 10 size_t findNumber(int *sort, const int array[],int key,size_t size); int main(void){ int a[SIZE]; size_t x;
I am trying to construct a program without a main function that outputs stars but at the same time outputs the number and a colon after the number but before the number of star. This is the coding i have so far.
This for loop replaces the stars ******** in an array that contains a word to be guessed with the correct letter (c) that the user inputs if the word contains that letter.
Problem: After every guess the same hidden string of stars ******* is displayed instead of ex: ***W**** (assuming W was entered by the user)
How can I update the old ******** string in the Stars array with the new string that includes the correct letters chosen, so after every correct guess at a letter in the word a new string is displayed including the correct letters chosen?
I'm pretty sure I have to use strcpy but not sure how to implement it using a loop.
Code: for(i = 0; i < strlen(unscrambledWord); i++) { if(unscrambledWord [i] == c) { Stars[i] = c; } }
void foo(const double va, const int q) { int qaa[q]; ...... return; }
However, the compiler indicates allocator cannot allocate an array of constant size 0... how can I use the argument "q" to fix the size of array "qaa"?
How to find the size of an array in called function? When we pass the array a argument to function definition we will be having base address of array, so my understanding is that we will not get the size of an array? but is there any hacking for this to find size of array other than passing as size an argument to this called function?
Write a function that accepts an array of integers and its size as arguments. The function should create a new array that is one element larger than the argument array. The first element of the new array should be set to 0. Element 0 of the argument array should be copied to element 1 of the new array, element 1 of the argument array should be copied to element 2 of the new array, and so forth.
The function should return a pointer to the new array. Use ONLY pointer parameters instead of arrays in both functions; use pointers (not subscripts) to move through elements of both arrays. Before calling the function, display your original array. When the function call is completed, display the new array.
Here is what i got so far:
#include <iostream> using namespace std; int *shifted (int * , int); const int SIZE = 10; int main () { int array_size [30];
I wanted to print the values of a array from a function by passing the array as well as the number of elements to be read. For a single dimensional array, this is how i have written it. It's pretty straight forward. I want to read 5 elements from the 5th element in the array.
Code: #include<stdio.h> void display(int array[],int size) { int i;
[Code]....
With this code I want to print the five elements from the element present in [0][4].
But shows an error that
Code: D:BennetCodeblocks CLearning CSingleDimentionalArray.c||In function 'main':| D:BennetCodeblocks CLearning CSingleDimentionalArray.c|18|warning: passing argument 1 of 'display' from incompatible pointer type [enabled by default]| D:BennetCodeblocks CLearning CSingleDimentionalArray.c|2|note: expected 'int (*)[10]' but argument is of type 'int *'| ||=== Build finished: 0 error(s), 1 warning(s) (0 minute(s), 0 second(s)) ===|
I know when you pass a array as an argument it gets decomposed into a pointer, but with a multi-dimensional array this is not the case. how this works for mult- dimensional array's?
I'm working on a piece of code written long time ago. Without getting in the details or too much context here, there is a function that declares an array of char of a size of 350,000 elements, in order to fill it (using a pointer) with the list of all running processes on the machine (using "ps -ejf" on a Linux box).
The size of the char array has been changed from 40,000 to 350,000 sometime along the years, probably because of a lack of space required.
What kind on data structure / storage would you use to store the running processes in order to eventually search for a value in it?
The printArray function should take in the dynamically created array and the size of the array as parameters. It should print out the contents of the array.
#include <iostream> #include <string> using namespace std;
[Code].....
My problem is that how to write the code to print the array using pointers. I've been stuck for awhile trying to figure it out.
This seems simple enough but I'm missing something here to make this code work.What I'm trying to do is print the contents of the two dimensional array in 25 rows and 4 columns. I experimented with something similar to this code when I initialized the array with numbers.
I'm getting garbage. I tried including the name of the array in the cin object but I got an error message that says "no match for operator '>>'. When I take the name of the array out, the program compiles but I get garbage. Program is suppose to reads data from a file of 25 students and calculates test scores and class grade average output each student's name score, letter grade and grade average. I would be happy at this point if I could just print out something that wasn't garbage.
Here is the code.
#include <iostream> #include <iomanip> #include <cmath> #include <string> #include <fstream> using namespace std; //const const int Array_Row = 25; const int Array_Col = 4;