2

I'm fairly new to C++ programming and I've been getting an error that I can't seem to figure out. I've tried it many different ways and just get variations of the same error. here is the error and my code:

 account.cxx: In member function ‘char* account::get_name() const’:                                                                                                                                                                     
 account.cxx:26: error: invalid conversion from ‘const char*’ to ‘char*’ 

          //File: account.h
 68     class account
 69     {
 70     public:
 71     typedef char* string;
 72     static const size_t MAX_NAME_SIZE = 15;
 73         // CONSTRUCTOR
 74     account (char* i_name, size_t i_acnum, size_t i_hsize);
 75     account (const account& ac);
 76     // DESTRUCTOR
 77     ~account ( );
 78         // MODIFICATION MEMBER FUNCTIONS
 79     void set_name(char* new_name);
 80     void set_account_number(size_t new_acnum);
 81     void set_balance(double new_balance);
 82     void add_history(char* new_history);
 83     // CONSTANT MEMBER FUNCTIONS
 84     char* get_name ( ) const;
 85         size_t get_account_number ( ) const;
 86         double get_balance( ) const;
 87     size_t get_max_history_size( ) const;
 88         size_t get_current_history_size ( ) const;
 89         string* get_history( ) const;
 90         friend ostream& operator <<(ostream& outs, const account& target);
 91     private:
 92     char name[MAX_NAME_SIZE+1]; //name of the account holder
 93     size_t ac_number; //account number
 94     double balance; //current account balance
 95     string *history; //Array to store history of transactions
 96     size_t history_size; //Maximum size of transaction history
 97     size_t history_count; //Current size of transaction history
 98     };


 1 // File: account.cxx
 2 // Author: Mike Travis
 3 // Last Modified: Feb, 26, 2012
 4 // Description: implementation of Account class as prescribed by the file account.h
 5 
 6 #include <stdio.h>
 7 #include <iostream>
 8 #include "account.h"
 9 
 10 using namespace std;
 11 //Constructor
 12 
 13 account::account(char* i_name, size_t i_acnum, size_t i_hsize){
 14 string *d_history = NULL;
 15 d_history = new string[i_hsize];
 16 
 17 for(int i = 0; i<MAX_NAME_SIZE +1; i++){
 18     name[i] = i_name[i];
 19 }
 20 ac_number = i_acnum;
 21 history_size = i_hsize;
 22 history_count = 0;
 23 }
 24 
 25 char* account::get_name() const {
 26 return &name;
 27 }

I haven't yet written the rest of the implementation file since I can't get around this error.

In line 26 of account.cxx I have tried several variations with no success.

2
  • Please fix your indentation. And why aren't you using std::string? Feb 28, 2012 at 22:09
  • Is that the exact error message for that exact code? (Hint: no). The type of &name in account::get_name() is char (*)[MAX_NAME+1] not char*, and the compiler should be able to tell you that much. Feb 29, 2012 at 0:14

4 Answers 4

6

You declare get_name() const, which means that this is a const pointer. By extension, name is also const, and can only be converted to const char*. You should return name, not return &name&name is a pointer to an array, not an array. Array names are implicitly convertible to element pointers; pointers to arrays are not.

Apart from that, you need only change the declaration to the following:

const char* get_name() const;

Or the mutable equivalent:

char* get_name();

However, if you’re using C++, use C++ features: there is a std::string class for a reason, and it will save you a lot of trouble in the long run over using C-style strings:

string get_name() const;

You’re already using string for history, after all. Also, you might change string* history to vector<string> history, using the std::vector class from the <vector> header. This will hide the details of memory management involved in adding and removing history items.

9
  • the header file (with the strage indentation) was given to us by our professor. We aren't supposed to change it at all, just write the implementation file for it. Jon, your correction will work, but is there a way to do this without any changes to the header file account.h?
    – MRT89
    Feb 28, 2012 at 22:14
  • @user1238900: If you need a horrific hack to get around the horrific code, use const_cast<char*>(name), which (unsafely) removes the const qualifier from the pointer. But you can also use this as an opportunity to learn from your professor’s mistakes. ;)
    – Jon Purdy
    Feb 28, 2012 at 22:17
  • 1
    A professor who enforces a bad implementation instead of letting you figure out your own? I wouldn't take any more of their classes.
    – AJG85
    Feb 28, 2012 at 22:19
  • 1
    Frustrating isn't it? I said screw it and changed his header file anyway. The indentation alone was driving me crazy, ha. anyway, this site kicks ass. this was my first post and you guys nailed it in minutes. Thanks a lot!
    – MRT89
    Feb 28, 2012 at 22:28
  • 1
    @Mtravis: BTW, if you really want to piss off your instructor change the signature of the function to: char const (&get_name() const)[ MAX_NAME_SIZE+1 ];... (before you do that, understand what it means) Feb 29, 2012 at 0:40
0
char* account::get_name() const 

should be

const char* account::get_name() const

If that error wasn't stopping you, people could start editing your object's name!

0

account::get_name() is a const member function, which means that its access to any data member is also const. That means it sees name as a char const[MAX_NAME_SIZE+1].

Also:

  • &name is a char const(*)[MAX_NAME_SIZE+1]
  • name — when it decays — will turn into a char const*, and that's what you want.

So:

const char* account::get_name() const
{
   return name;
}
0
-1
char name[MAX_NAME_SIZE+1];

... is const char * ()[MAX_NAME_SIZE+1] not char *. Try using std::string.

1
  • 1
    No, it's not "equal" to that at all. It certainly has nothing to do with function types. Feb 28, 2012 at 23:03

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.