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Found 7197 Articles for C++

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A process dumps core when it is terminated by the operating system due to a fault in the program. The most typical reason this occurs is that the program accessed an invalid pointer value like NULL or some value out of its memory area. As part of that process, the operating system tries to write our information to a file to allow us to analyze what happened.This core can be used as follows to diagnose and debug our program −The core is dumped to the /proc/sys/kernel directory by default. To debug a core, the program must be compiled with the ... Read More

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The explicit keyword in C++ is used to mark constructors to not implicitly convert types. For example, if you have a class Foo −class Foo { public: Foo(int n); // allocates n bytes to the Foo object Foo(const char *p); // initialize object with char *p };Now if you tryFoo mystring = 'x';The char 'x' is implicitly converted to int and then will call the Foo(int) constructor. But this is not what was intended. So to prevent such conditions and make the code less error-prone, define the constructor as explicit −Example class Foo { public: ... Read More

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Standard C++ doesn't provide a way to do this. You could use the system command to initialize the ls command as follows −Example#include int main () { char command[50] = "ls -l"; system(command); return 0; }OutputThis will give the output −-rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 9728 Feb 25 20:51 a.out -rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 131 Feb 25 20:44 hello.cpp -rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 243 Sep 7 13:09 hello.py -rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 33198 Jan 7 11:42 hello.o drwxrwxrwx 0 root root 512 Oct 1 21:40 hydeout -rwxrwxrwx 1 root root 42 Oct 21 11:29 ... Read More

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In C++, both std::endl and are used for inserting a newline in the output stream. However, std::endl also clears the output buffer by sending all the stored output to the screen. In this article, we will see a detailed comparison along with a table and discuss the scenarios where each should be used in C++. (newline character) '' is an escape sequence that represents a newline character, which makes the cursor move to the next line. This is also used inside string literals to create line breaks. It’s faster compared to endl but doesn’t flush. When to use ... Read More

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Undefined behavior is a way to give freedom to implementors (e.g. of compilers or of OSes) and to computers to do whatever they "want", in other words, to not care about consequences.The cases in which segmentation fault occurs are transient in nature. They won't always result in a segmentation fault but can also run correctly(or at least appear to). For example, consider the following code fragment −#include int main() { int arr[2]; arr[0] = 0; arr[1] = 1; arr[2] = 2; // Undefined behaviour arr[3] = 3; // Undefined behaviour ... Read More

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You can sort a vector of custom objects using the C++ STL function std::sort. The sort function has an overloaded form that takes as arguments first, last, comparator. The first and last are iterators to first and last elements of the container. The comparator is a predicate function that can be used to tell how to sort the container. example#include #include #include using namespace std; struct MyStruct { int key; string data; MyStruct(int key, string data) { this -> key = key; this -> data = data; } }; int ... Read More

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You can use the popen and pclose functions to pipe to and from processes. The popen() function opens a process by creating a pipe, forking, and invoking the shell. We can use a buffer to read the contents of stdout keep appending it to a result string and return this string when the processes exit. Example Here is the following example showing an execution of a command and getting the output of the command within C++ using POSIX. #include #include #include #include using namespace std; string exec(const string& command) { char buffer[128]; string result ... Read More

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Variables can be declared in a switch statement. You'll just need to declare them and use them within a new scope in the switch statement. For example,Example#include using namespace std; int main() { int i = 10; switch(i) { case 2: //some code break; case 10:{ int x = 13; cout

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In C++, there is no difference between 'struct' and 'typedef struct' because, in C++, all struct/union/enum/class declarations act like they are implicitly typedef'ed, as long as the name is not hidden by another declaration with the same name.Though there is one subtle difference that typedefs cannot be forward declared. So for the typedef option, you must include the file containing the typedef before it is used anywhere.