I have been given the following code in my test file to implement:
cout << "Testing the Matrix constructors:" << endl;
cout << "Case 1: Creating a 2x4 matrix of zeros with the standard constructor:" << endl;
{
Matrix matrix(2, 4);
cout << matrix << endl;
Currently my code in my .cpp file for the constructor is as follows:
Matrix::Matrix (const int noOfRows, const int noOfCols){
double **p_matrix = new double*[noOfRows];
for(int i=0; i< noOfRows; i++){
p_matrix[i] = new double[noOfCols];
}
for(int i=0; i< noOfRows; i++){
for(int j=0; j<noOfCols; j++){
p_matrix[i][j] = 0;
}
}
My main confusion is the cout<< matrix part of the code as I could print out my 2x4 matrix within my constructor without needing this line. However, I have been asked to include cout<< matrix and I'm not sure I understand how it is meant to work. Is it calling my object matrix? And if so, how do I return my 2D array p_matrix since I'm not able to return a value from a constructor?
I thought one solution might be to overload my << operator as shown below:
std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& output, const Matrix& rhs){
output << rhs.data << std::endl;
return output; }
The reason I put rhs.data is because I tried rhs.matrix and rhs.p_matrix but got an error that a member variable was needed. Within my .h file, the only member variables I'm allowed are as follows:
- int noOfRows: the member variable that stores the number of rows
- int noOfColumns: the member variable that stores the number of columns
- double *data: the member variable that stores the address to the 1-D array of the matrix entries arranged column-wise, i.e., 1st column followed by the 2nd column and so on and so forth
- int GetIndex (const int rowIdx, const int columnIdx) const: the member function that determines the position (index) along the 1-D array (data) of a matrix entry in the row specified by rowIdx and the column specified by columnIdx.
I'm unsure how I can use operator overloading using only these variables so is this the best solution or is there an alternative way? Considering the limitations that I can't change my test file or the 4 member variables