I have been searching all over and cannot find anything like this. Now, I won't bore you with my whole program. It's incredibly long. But, here's your basic overview:
int main()
{
int i=0;
int h=5;
cout << "h(IS) = " << h << endl;
cout << "testing comment.";
while(i < 10)
{
cout << "I'm in the loop!";
i++;
}
return 0;
}
Looks great, right? Okay, so here's the problem. I run it, and I get a segmentation fault. The weirdest part is where I'm getting it. That testing comment doesn't even print. Oh, and if I comment out all the lines before the loop, I still get the fault.
So, here's my output, so you understand:
h(IS) = 5
Segmentation fault
I am completely, and utterly, perplexed. In my program, h calls a function - but commenting out both the line that prints h and the function call have no effect, in fact, all it does is give the segmentation fault where the line ABOVE the printing h line used to be.
What is causing this fault? Anything I can do to test where it's coming from?
Keep your answers simple please, I'm only a beginner compared to most people here :)
Note: I can provide my full code upon request, but it's 600 lines long.
EDIT: I have pasted the real code here: http://pastebin.com/FGNbQ2Ka
Forgive the weird comments all over the place - and the arrays. It's a school assignment and we have to use them, not pointers. The goal is to print out solutions to the 15-Puzzle. And it's 1 AM, so I'm not going to fix my annoyed comments throughout the thing.
I most recently got irritated and commented out the whole first printing just because I thought it was something in there...but no...it's not. I still get the fault. Just with nothing printed.
For those interested, my input information is 0 6 2 4 1 10 3 7 5 9 14 8 13 15 11 12
THANK YOU SO MUCH, EVERYONE WHO'S HELPING! :)