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i have to create an array of objects but i also have a parameterized constructor in my class which does some initialization to the attributes of class.
How to do this in c++?
With a "normal" initialization list?
Example:
struct S
{
S(int, const std::string&) {} // Just a dummy constructor
};
S array_of_s[2] = {
S(123, "foo"),
S(456, "bar")
};
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Closed 1 year ago.
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Seeing that QT has a piece of code like this, how can new return an object instead of a pointer?
You made the wrong conclusion. new always returns a pointer. You need to read the documentation of the classes you are using to know how their constructor works. One way to enable foo f = new foo; is the following:
struct foo {
foo(foo*){}
foo(){}
};
int main(){
foo f = new foo;
}
Note that = here is not assignment! The object f is initialized by calling its constructor taking a pointer to a foo.
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I find this question tricky. What do u ppl think?
template <typename T> class myTemplate
{
public:
T val;
...
};
void myFunction()
{
MyTemplate<int> a;
MyTemplate<double> b;
}
You are instantiating the template twice with two different template parameters, so it'll create two class instances.
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I new to programming. In stack overflow i couldn't see difference between : & :: is mentioned. Could anyone can explain in detail it helps to beginner learners like me. Thank you.
So you would use :: when you're defining/using methods from a class, so like for example
class foo{
public:
int bar;
int hi(int x);
int func(); // static member function
Foo(int num): bar(num) {}; // use of a colon, initialization list
};
int foo::hi(int x){
//define the function
}
Also if you have static member functions, you can just call those whenever through using foo::func(). You can find more about static member functions online.
The single colon is for member initialization list (you can look this topic up online) where you can initialization member variables in the construction of your class.
You can also find single colon used in polymorphism, when you derive a class from a base class. You can find more information about c++ polymorphism online.
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I'm creating class that has a templated object (Item<T>) as a member, basically like this:
class myClass
{
int other_int;
public:
int member_function();
vector<Item<T>> vec;
};
Currently, I have Item<string>, but I need to be able to use it with non string objects. Is there a way to do this without templating myClass (which would obviously be a lot of work for a complicated class)?
If your class will only use Item< string>, you may try:
class myClass
{
int other_int;
public:
int member_function();
vector<Item<string>> vec;
};
But if you want any other type of Item in the vector, the answer is No, there is no magic solutions.
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In a method of an object of type class A, I handle an object of class B that has a public method .join(*A).
I want my object of type A calling this someObjectOfTypeB.join(*A) method, to use a pointer to itself as the parameter.
void A::someMethod()
{
B b();
b.join(I want to a to use a pointer to itself as a parameter);
}
A a();
a.someMethod();
Upon further investigation, this was not the problem as I led myself to believe; and is indeed the correct way of doing what I wanted to do.
Try using this:
void A::someMethod()
{
B b;
b.join(this);
}
As #AndrewLazarus and #JonathanWakely commented, use B b; instead of B b(). The later declares a function b without parameters which returns B, and that is not what you want.