boolean.cpp:
Boolean::Boolean() : test1(false),test2(false)
{
}
void Boolean::exec() {
test1 = true;
test2 = true;
if ((!test1) && (!test2))
std::cout << "both test1 && test2 are false" << std::endl;
else
std::cout << "test1 is " << test1 << " test2 is " << test2 << std::endl;
}
void Boolean::exec2() {
if ((!test1) && (!test2))
std::cout << "both test1 && test2 are false" << std::endl;
else
std::cout << "test1 is " << test1 << " test2 is " << test2 << std::endl;
}
boolean.h:
class Boolean {
private:
bool test1;
bool test2;
public:
Boolean();
void exec();
void exec2();
};
main.cpp:
int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
Boolean start;
start.exec();
Boolean start2;
start2.exec2();
}
output:
test1 is 1 test2 is 1
both test1 & test2 are false
if I use a default constructor to set test1 and test2 to false at start. the values set in Boolean::exec() get overwritten if I need a new instance of Boolean.
bool test1 = false; declaration is not allowed in a class. without default constructor the bool values are not initialized.
so what's the best solution to declare bool 'false' and keep 'true' if it's set ?
Boolean
?bool
as argument so you can specify them on creation.exec1
changes the state of the respective instance,exec2
does not. Please provide more context on what the desired behaviour is.Boolean
to somehow alter an unrelated instance, that isn't going to happen without static members (which honestly would be pointless).exec2()
is called on the same instance ofBoolean
. Each instance (object) has its own copy of non-static members. Are you trying to share data between objects? If so, why? Can you give details?