C :: Function Fails On Even Number Of Arguments

Nov 3, 2013

What I have is a main function that takes input characters from the command prompt during the main function call, and coverts it to an integer array a using atoi. (starting at the 2nd character - the 1st is reserved for another call that I plan to reference later, and the 0th is obviously the ./function). A function is then called to find the mode of an array (the range of values in the array is 1-30). Now, when I run the whole thing, I get a segmentation fault (core dumped) for even number of arguments. It's late and I've been staring at it for too long...

Code:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int get_mode(int a[], int count);

[Code]......

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C++ :: How To Calculate Number Of Arguments In A Function

Aug 19, 2013

i'm trying building my how Write() function:

template <typename T>
....
Write(T Argument1[,T ArgumentX])

how can i calculate the numeber of Arguments added? (in C we used an argument for tells how many we putted in a function, but not in these case)

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C++ :: Function With 3 Arguments - Bring Back New Number Generated With Replacement

Oct 26, 2014

Write a function that takes 3 arguments. The function has to bring back a new number that has been generated with the replacement of the figure that is on a given position in the number with a figure that is been transferred as an argument(have in mind that the position of the figure is being counted from right to left,starting from one). Write a main program in which the newly formed numbers will be printed for numbers of a range written by the user.

Example: if you wrote the numbers 2276,3 and 5 the function should bring back the number 2576

If you didn't understand the text, the example shows that in the number 2276, the number has been counted from right to left by the second argument "3" and in the place of the figure "2" has been put the figure "5".

This is where I got stuck, I can't figure out how to make the replacement.

int argument(int x,int y,int z) {
return 0;
} int main() {
int a,b,c;
printf("Enter a value for a(100-999):");
scanf("%d",&a);

[Code] ....

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C++ ::  delete Function Necessary When Allocation Fails?

Apr 13, 2014

I have a quick question about dynamic memory. I know that if you are dynamically allocating memory for a single data array and it fails, you can immediately abort the program via a return statement, but is this also true with multiple data arrays? For instance:

int *foo, *bar
foo = new (nothrow) int [5];
bar = new (nothrow) int [5];
if (foo == nullptr || bar == nullptr)
return -1;
else
/*rest of execution */

If the answer to the previous question is no, do you need to do a delete[] on the arrays that succeeded before terminating the application? Say foo is correctly allocated but bar fails, would you have to do something like this?

int *foo, *bar
foo = new (nothrow) int [5];
bar = new (nothrow) int [5];
if (foo == nullptr || bar == nullptr) {
if (foo == nullptr && bar != nullptr)
delete[] bar;

[Code] .....

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C++ :: Map Comparison Fails In Function Const

Jan 27, 2012

Why I'm getting an error here. I've dumbed down my code for simplicity and removed irrelevant code.

PHP Code:
class Foo {
    public:
        bool IsNull() const;
    private:
        std::map<int, int*> test;

[Code] ....

I'm getting a "passing...discards qualifiers" error on my if statement and not sure why because I'm not changing anything. I know removing const or making test mutable fixes the issue. I've been taught to always make a function const if it doesn't change anything, in which case, have I finally come across an acceptable time to use mutable?

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Visual C++ :: System Function Fails To Parse Argument

Apr 29, 2014

I have a very strange problem with the system() function (on XP).

I have the following code:

Code:
char *text1 = ""A SpaceAction.bat" fred";
char *text2 = ""A SpaceAction.bat" "fred"";
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
printf("%s
", text1);

[Code] .....

When I run it where "A Space" is a directory with a space in the name, this is the result:

Code:
"A SpaceAction.bat" fred

F:Test>echo Testing
Testing
"A SpaceAction.bat" "fred"

'A' is not recognized as an internal or external command, operable program or batch file.

It seems that the double quotes round an argument make the parsing of the command fail.

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C++ :: Functions With Variable Number Of Arguments

Apr 21, 2014

Write a function write with variable number of arguments that takes a string first argument followed by any number of arguments of type double and prints on the screen a string formatted by the rules described below. The first argument may contain formats in curly braces of the form {index[:specifier]}, where the square brackets show optional parts (this is :specifier may be missing), and index is the sequence number of an argument of type double (starting from sequence number 0).

Rules for formatting: In the printed string the curly brackets and their content will be replaced by the argument with the given index, formatted according to the given format specifier. If the format specifier is missing, the argument will be printed with its default format. For example:

write("The number {0} is greater than {1}.", 5, -3);
will print
The number 5 is greater than -3.

write("There are no format specifiers here.");
will print
There are no format specifiers here.

The format specifiers and their meanings are listed in the following table

Specifier MeaningFormat Output for 1.62 Output for 2.0
none default {0}1.62 2
ccurrency{0:c}$1.62 $2.00
escientific{0:e}1.620000e+000 2.000000e+000
ffixed point{0:f}1.620000 2.000000
iround to int{0:i}2 2

Limitations: You may limit the maximum number of arguments your function can process to a certain value, for example 10.

Suggested extensions:
-Add an optional alignment specification in the format , e.g., make the format of the form {index[,alignment][:specifier]}, where alignment is an integer specifying the width of the field in which the corresponding argument will be printed. If alignment is positive, align to the right, if it is negative, align to the left.
-Accept an optional integer after the specifier letter, specifying the required precision in the output. For example, {0:f2} will print the number 1.6234 as 1.62, but {0:f5} will print it as 1.62340.

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C++ :: VC Thread Arguments Number Limited?

Mar 2, 2013

I am using thread on VC 2012 (very close to VC 2010). When the argument list is short, it works fine. However, when I add a function with more arguments, the compiler indicates "no thread constructor match the argument list....etc", and when I reduce the number of arguments, it works.

Is there a limit about thread constructor? I didn't see this in ISO C++11 standard. How can I fix this limit?

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C :: Dynamic String Using Variable Number Of Arguments

Mar 6, 2015

I need to create dynamic string by given format(%d,%s,%f,%lf,%c) using variable number of arguments in function. This code gives me an error(main.exe has stopped working):

Code:

#include<stdio.h>
#include<stdarg.h>
#include<string.h>
#include<stdlib.h>
char *form(char *format,...);
char *form(char *format,...)

[Code]...

I assume the error is in functions(itoa,fcvt,ecvt).

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C/C++ :: Dynamic String Using Variable Number Of Arguments

Mar 14, 2015

I need to create dynamic string by given format(%d,%s,%f,%lf,%c) using variable number of arguments in function. This code gives me an error(main.exe has stopped working):

#include<stdio.h>
#include<stdarg.h>
#include<string.h>
#include<stdlib.h>
char *form(char *format,...);
char *form(char *format,...)

[Code] ....

I assume the error is in functions(itoa,fcvt,ecvt).

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C/C++ :: Unlimited Number Of Arguments - Float To String Conversion

Mar 21, 2015

So, I'm supposed to do : Create a function with unlimited number of arguments, which forms a dynamic string based on the following form (%d, %s, %f, %lf, %c), with the following prototype:

char*create(char*form, ...);

The function is supposed to have the following output:

create("Peter is %d years old and is in %s-%c class.",7,"second",'A');
-> Peter is 7 years old and is in 7-A class.
create("His GPA is %lf.",4.96);
-> His GPA is 4.96.
create("His favourite subject is math!");
-> His favourite subject is math!

I've managed to do the following :

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <string.h>
#include <stdarg.h>
char *create(char *form, ...) {
char *res =(char*)calloc(1,1),*pos_int,*pos_float,*pos_str,pos_char,*pos_long;

[Code] ....

The part with %d and %s string was not that hard, but now I'm supposed to convert %f and %lf to string, I've tried using sprintf but I've had no luck so far, another problem is the fact that I've gotta use lists to complete the task. I've been trying to convert float to string for the past 2 hours, but I'm drawing a blank now.

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C++ :: Function Does Not Take 3 Arguments

Apr 27, 2013

I am doing a problem where I need to use arrays of string objects that hold 5 student names, an array of one character to hold the five students' letter grades and five arrays of doubles to hold each student's set of test scores and average score.

When I try to run it, I get these five errors.

error C2660: 'getTestScore' : function does not take 3 arguments : line 39
error C2660: 'getTestScore' : function does not take 3 arguments : line 45
error C2660: 'getTestScore' : function does not take 3 arguments : line 51
error C2660: 'getTestScore' : function does not take 3 arguments : line 57
error C2660: 'getTestScore' : function does not take 3 arguments : line 63

what is wrong.

Here's my code.

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C :: Arguments When Declaring A Function?

Jun 5, 2013

I am a bit confused about how specific one must be with arguments when declaring a function. I'll show you two functions from the book I'm using to learn C to show you what I mean.

Example 1 (greatest common denominator function):

Code:
void gcd (int u, int v) {
int temp;
printf ( "

[Code] ....

So in that function, there are exactly two arguments, because that's how many arguments the algorithm to find the gcd takes. No problem there, makes sense to me. Then further in the chapter on functions I run into this,

Example 2 (square root function):

Code:
float absoluteValue (float x) {
if ( x < 0 )
x = -x;
return x;

[Code] ....

In this second example, we have a square root function that is preceded by an absolute value function. The absolute value function has the one argument, "float x", however when this function is called within the square root function, the arguments "guess * guess * -x" are passed to it. I'm confused how this absolute value function is working with all of that inside it, when it was originally declared with just "x." The only possibility I can think of is that this expression is treated as a single unit, but I'm not sure.

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C :: Function With Multiple Arguments

Jan 15, 2015

I am actually developing an nginx module in C.I am not to bad in C, but i got a big problem to pass argument to a vadiadic function.This function look like the well good old printf, but you put a buffer as first argument, the last address to stop to put data as second argument (in my case it is the last adress of disponible memory), a string that look like one in printf, an the other argument after.Here is the problem, the 4th last argument does not have the good value. In fact, It seem to be random value from memory. I Use gcc (Debian 4.9.1-19) 4.9.1.

Code:

/* ngx_html_log.h */
#ifndef NGX_HTML_LOG_H
#define NGX_HTML_LOG_H
#include <ngx_vasm.h>
}

[code]...

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C++ :: Function With Template Arguments

May 26, 2013

I'm trying to create a callback wrapper for pointers to member functions of any class by using templates, std::function and std::bind. This will be used to send incoming sf::Event's to classes who register callbacks with an event manager. I based my code off of the example on this page: URL.....Here's what I have:

class EventCallback
{
std::function<bool(const sf::Event&)> func;

public:
template<typename T>
EventCallback(T* object, bool(T::*func)(const sf::Event&)) { func = std::bind(func, object, std::placeholders::_1); }
bool run(const sf::Event& evt) { return func(evt); }
};

[code]....

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C/C++ :: Pointer As Function Arguments

Dec 26, 2014

How this code work bcoz when pointer variable assigned in called function and how different values get as resultant output, ans 2 97 for below code. How the code wil execute so that i can validate ans

#include <stdio.h>
int main() {
int i = 97, *p = &i;
foo(&i);
printf("%d ", *p);

[Code] ....

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C :: How To Call Function With Correct Arguments

Sep 13, 2013

I'm not a programmer, at least, not a good one. I'm a researcher and I need to implement this function and test it and use it for my research. I tested some clustering methods in JAVA and Matlab and also I want to test it on C. I don't know too much about programming, especially about C, I know nothing. I tried to implement some basic methods but I failed.

It's all about K-Means Algorithm. I'm working on a disease and I'm trying to find ways to early diagnosis. Anyway, these are details. The thing is, I found a 'free to use' function but I don't know how can I use it. I tried to learn something from Net, I downloaded a compiler, I paste the code and I get many errors... And I heard that I have to do some "calling function" stuff but I don't know how to..

The code is in the link below: URL....It's not imperative that using this function, it can be another one but it had to written in C.

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C++ ::  Calculator Program - Function Does Not Take 0 Arguments

Jan 29, 2014

I am supposed to get 2 numbers then have the person choose what they want to do to the numbers. Here is the code:

//Mike Karbowiak
//12/24/13
//Mathematics
#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>
#include <string>
#include <vector>
#include <algorithm>

[Code] ....

The errors I am getting so far are:

error C2660: 'Add' : function does not take 0 arguments
error C2660: 'Subtract' : function does not take 0 arguments
error C2660: 'Multiply' : function does not take 0 arguments
error C2660: 'Divide' : function does not take 0 arguments

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C++ :: Call Function With Arguments From Java

Sep 19, 2013

I am working on a project in a group at a university. We are creating a GUI in Java where the user can enter parameters. Then we want to be able to pass these parameters to a function inside our C/C++ program, that does the rest. How do I do this? So far I have managed to call a simple helloworld-function by using JNI, dll and a javah tool that create a header file from a java file. I define the helloworld-function in C and call it from Java.

Java file:

package helloworld;
public class HelloWorld {
private native void print();
public static void main(String[] args) {

[Code] ....

My problem is that I do not know how to call the helloworld-function with parameters. I guess that this is a special case when using JNI and a . dll. How do I pass simple char- and int-arguments from the Java class to the helloworld-C-function?

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C++ :: Pow - No Overloaded Function Takes 1 Arguments

Oct 4, 2013

I keep getting this error in my code. I believe it is because to use pow(x,y) both x and y have to be double, but how do i put that into my formula under calculations?

#include <iostream>
#include <cmath>
#include <iomanip>
#include <string>
#include <fstream>
using namespace std;
int main() {
// Declaration section: Declaring all variables.

[Code] ....

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C Sharp :: Procedure Or Function Has Too Many Arguments Specified

Apr 1, 2014

I have a button that calls a delete stored procedure with only two parameters. I can run the stored procedure via SQL manager and know it works. But, when I call the stored procedure from a sqldatasource on the .aspx page I get this error: Procedure or function has too many arguments specified.

Here is my code:

<asp:SqlDataSource runat="server" ID="sqlAuthorsInfo" ConnectionString="<%$ ConnectionStrings:Authors %>" 
ProviderName="<%$ ConnectionStrings:Authors.ProviderName %>" 
SelectCommand="FindAuthors" SelectCommandType="StoredProcedure" DeleteCommandType="StoredProcedure" 
DeleteCommand="Remove_Authors">
    <SelectParameters>

[Code] ....

Here is how the stored procedure looks - it is very simple:

DECLARE @authorcode int, @authorid int  
DELETE FROM Requests
WHERE authorcode = @authorcode
AND authorid = @authorid  

What is wrong? How do I resolve this???

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C++ :: Function Pointer Typedef With Same Type Arguments

Mar 6, 2015

I need to create the following brain damaging abomination:

I need a function pointer type to a function that has an argument of the same function pointer type and returns the same function pointer type.

The purpose is to enable a type of subroutine threading scheme for a small application specific scripting language. The question could just as well have been posted to the C forum.

This syntax works, but Payload is a generic type which I can coerce into the right pointer type via a cast. This is ugly IMHO. I could also hide it as a pointer in the FlipState class since I've forward declared this.

But this is an extra indirection in a performance critical part of the code, and also ugly.

Code:
class FlipState ;
typedef PayLoad (*FuncPtr) (FlipState *fs, PayLoad P) ; This syntax blows chunks using gcc on the other hand. Code: class FlipState ;
typedef FuncPtr (*FuncPtr) (FlipState *fs, FuncPtr P) ;

[Code] .....

This is hardly surprising. The compiler could not possibly understand what I was defining in the typedef. I think what I need is some kind of way to forward declare a function pointer type and then redefine it properly.

Is such a think even possible or am I just SOL? This one is mind boggling. We know how to do this with classes or other complex data types, but the syntax eludes me for both C++ and C.

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C :: How To Handle Enum Checks In Function Arguments

Aug 31, 2013

As we know in C there is no checking if values passed to a function that takes enum are correct, that is if they have been defined in this enum. Example from Enums in C | Occasionally sane ([code] tags don't work on my fx 18.0.1 this is why I put in on pb): [URL] ......

Here c - How to check if an enum variable is valid? - Stack Overflow they say that common convention is add check whether value passed as the parameter is not bigger than the maximum value in enum. But how about situations when enum is composed of numbers from 1-20 and then from 500-510?

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C :: Prototype For A Function Accepting Variable Arguments

Dec 6, 2014

what should be the prototype for the following function.

Code:void addition(int x, ...);

I am getting compilation errors. I have written the prototype as :

Code: void addition(int, va_list);

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C++ :: Left Over Arguments When Calling Function Pointers

May 5, 2014

Say I have a function pointer with this definition:

void ( *pressFunc ) ( void*, void* );

And i did this function:

void functionWithOneArg ( void* testPtr );

And i did this

pressFunc = &functionWithOneArg;

One. Would C actually let me do this? ( Assigning a function with one argument to a function with two )

Two. If so, what would happen to the second argument that is passed the function when its called? Does it just get 'cut off' and only the first argument is passed?

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C++ :: Creating A Variable Inside Function Arguments

May 15, 2013

In the following code:

#include <iostream> // For stream I/O
using namespace std;
int function(int a) {
return a;
}
int main() {
function(int b);
}

Why is creating a variable inside the function argument list not allowed. Any reason other then for the language syntax or just for the language syntax?

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