C++ :: Palindrome That Takes A Vector Parameter And Returns True Or False
Apr 26, 2014
Write a function palindrome that takes a vector parameter and returns true or false according to whether the vector does or does not read the same forward as backward (e.g., a vector containing 1, 2, 3, 2, 1 is a palindrome, but a vector containing 1, 2, 3, 4 is not).
I have a hit a snag in a number guessing game program. I was given a half-completed program and told to use functions to complete the missing pieces. It looks unwieldy, but this is how it is supposed to be. I have temporarily made the random guess value visible for troubleshooting purposes.
#include <iostream> #include <time.h> #include <stdlib.h> using namespace std; int welcome() { cout << " Welcome to the hi-low game!" << endl;
[code]....
The issue lies within this piece of code:
checkGuess(guess, correct); done = false; //either true or false } while (!done); cout << "Congratulations, you got it!" << endl; return 0; }
I need to manipulate the Boolean variable done so that it registers as false when the user inputs a number higher or lower than the randomly selected value. However, if the user guesses correctly, done will become true and the program will end.
As it stands now, the program will not terminate, and if I set done equal to true like so:
checkGuess(guess, correct); done = true; //either true or false } while (!done); cout << "Congratulations, you got it!" << endl; return 0; }
Every number the user inputs will register as correct instead of the one right guess.
The first line in the data file is a comment that you may assume can be up to 80 charac- ters long; it cannot be blank. The second line contains the answer key for the 10-question true-false quiz. The following lines in the data file contain a student's id number in column 1 followed by their answers for the quiz in column 2. A 0 (zero) on a line by itself indicates that there are no more students to process.
Write a program that first reads in (from standard input; more on this in a moment) the comment line and answer key as strings followed by each student's data. Store the student's id numbers in an array. You are to "grade" each student's quiz using the key provided fol- lowed by recording their scores (in a second array) in order to be able to print them out later. You do not need to use an array of strings or characters in your program. Write your program allowing for up to 100 students, and you may assume that at least 1 student will have taken the quiz.
You should create test data text files and provide the data to your program using redirection from the command line (see the sample run below). Your program should output the number of students who took the quiz, the average score, the best score, and a table showing each student's id, score, and grade. The formatting, spacing, and labels in your output should 1 match the sample run below exactly.
Your program should determine each student's grade as follows: if the score is equal to the best score b or b−1, give an A. If it is b−2, award a B. Give C's for any score that is equal to b−3 or b−4, a D for b−5 and an F for all others.
Alright So I'm just stuck at comparing the key answer with student answer here is my code comparing one student's answer with the answer key . is that right ?? One more thing for some reason when i try to print answer[0] the result is nothing why is that
Code: #include<stdio.h> int main(void) { char comment[80]; char answer [10]; char studentans [10]; int n=0,i=0,x=0; int ID[10];
So im trying to create a quiz using c++ that incorporates three different types of questions. These are the standard one answer question, true false questions and multiple choice questions.
How to create the true false and multiple choice questions?
I was instructed to write a binary search function which would return true if an element, inputted by the user, was found in the array, and false if it was not. I'm not sure why, but my function always returns false. My code is as follows.
#include <iostream> #include <cstdlib> #include <ctime> using namespace std; //binary search function bool search (int array[], int item)
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;
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at first is also went wrong at line 22 and also returned that as true, but then I added brackets and it worked.
class Program { //Accept two input parameter and returns two out value public static void rect(int len, int width, out int area, out int perimeter) { area = len * width; perimeter = 2 * (len + width);
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why is the static keyword required in the method signature for the rect() method. It will not compile if it is absent. why?
the same is true for this example:
class Program { static void printvalues(params int[] passedin) { foreach (var printthis in passedin) { Console.WriteLine(printthis);
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This code won't compile without the static keyword in the printvalues() method signature. why?
I have a stored procedure, which I cannot change (it is used by older programs). It is passed an int of 15 and then an ID is generated and written to a database table. The created ID is then suppose to be selected and returned.
The INSERT does not seem to be working. I'm not getting the created ID value from my code, I am getting the value I passed to the procedure when I get to this
line of code "sessionID = sessionProcedureID.Value.ToString()";.
Below the stored procedure and my code.
/***************Stored Procedure***********************/ USE [testDataBase] GO SET ANSI_NULLS ON GO SET QUOTED_IDENTIFIER ON GO ALTER PROCEDURE [dbo].[MakeValue]
I have a school project in which need to create a function that takes a File Object as a Reference Parameter. Supposedly, it should allow me to read the first piece of data from others separated by a space from a file. The later be able to continue reading from the next piece of data.
I know how to set things up to read from the data file, such as using
I tried to sort a large numbers of vector of random integers with std::sort(), but when the number increases over 10M, std::sort returns all zero in values. Does std::sort have a limitation of input numbers?
My errors are at the end of the program in two function calls within the definition of the InsertByValue function. g++ does not seem to recognize NumArray as a valid parameter.
#include <iostream> #include <assert.h> using namespace std; const int CAPACITY = 20;
/* Displays the content of an int array, both the array and the size of array will be passed as parameters to the function @param array: gives the array to be displayed @param array_size: gives the number of elements in the array */ void DisplayArray (int array[], int array_size);
i am trying to make a ticktacktoe game. I made a simple one with no ai but i decide to add an option to play against computer. And i code like that(i know this is really bad):
bool validateNumber(string& text, int min = 0, int max = -1, bool useMin = true, bool getValid = true)
The code takes the string text, and checks the make sure that the input is valid and safe to convert and use as a number. However, sometimes there is not min, and sometimes there is no max. The lack of min is done by using the parameter useMin, while the lack of max is done by max < min.
My predicament is the following call: validateNumber(text, -2);
Now, max will be used, even though I don't want it. Ideally, I would want to do something like... int max = (min - 1), ... but that doesn't work. I also can't check to see if the parameter hasn't been changed (that I know of), because the following call would make it look like it hasn't validateNumber(text, -2, -1);
So the question is, is there a way to do what I want, without having to add in a bool useMax parameter? Or is this my only option? I don't want to do that for simplicity, but if I have to, I have to.
So, as the title says, I'm trying to eliminate false sharing, or, eliminate sharing writes between threads with TBB. The question is how.
Normally I'd make an array whose size is equal to the number of threads, then locally write to a local variable and update the array only at the end of the thread.
But, of course, I cannot seem to get either thread id or total number of threads TBB uses. I found a reference to tbb::enumerable_thread_specific, which as I understand, is supposed to work for exactly this. But as soon as I added it, it hurt performance by ~60% instead of making it better.
How to do this properly? You don't really need to look so hard on how the algorithm works (I don't know either). I know it's not quite right right now due to race conditions, but I'll fix that later. I used a reference implementation that I copied™, and my task is to parallelize it.
The parts where the problem is right now is in red (of course, it's not all problems; it's only a subset of them).
I'm havin trouble outputing different false statements in a boolean function... I'm currently working on a "secret number game" program which must generate a secret number and inform the user if his/her guess number is to high, to low or correct. I know boolean return true and false.. If the number is correct, the true statement will appear, if false... THAT'S where my problem starts cause now I have TWO statements to output..In a Function.. How do I make my program able to tell if the number guessed is "too high" or "too low" ?
do { printf("Edit the entry's cellphone number:"); scanf("%s", addressbook[4][num]); length = strlen(addressbook[4][num]); //gets the length of the input (should be 10) //checks if the input is composed of 11 elements wherein the first 2 are 0 and 9 respectively for(i=0; i<11; i++){
This program that I've made works fine to find midpoint, but not distance. The distancefunction always returns a 1 (true). To try to see that it wasn't the math, I added cout.setf(cout.boolalpha) to see and got a result of "true".
//This program is a start to solve basic coordinatre plane distances and midpoints #include <iostream> #include <cstdio> #include <cstdlib> using namespace std;
I am trying to write a simple program that produces different outputs based on entered age of two different users. Program should tell who is older and behave different if both users are older than 100.
Here is my program: Code: #include <iostream> using namespace std; int main() {
[Code].....
Why program executes this when both users are obviously more than 100