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I just wrote a simple program that has two functions in a class. Problem is when I called them from main(), only the first function executes and the program terminates without calling the second function.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
class exp{
public:
    string name;

public:
    string fun1(){
        cout<<"please enter value for first function  ";
        cin>>name;
        cout<<"yourname from first function is  ";
        cout<<name;
        return 0;
    }
    string fun2(){
        cout<<"Please enter value for second function  ";
        cin>>name;
        cout<<"yourname from second function is ";
        cout<<name;
        return 0;
    }


};
int main(){
    exp b1,b2;
    cout << b2.fun1();
    cout << b1.fun2();

}

The output is

please enter value for first function preet
yourname from first function is preet 
1
  • 1
    First, remove anything that you can while keeping the behaviour. By the end, your code could be a main function with one line.
    – chris
    Feb 20, 2015 at 14:48

2 Answers 2

1

You are returning 0 while the return type is string. Constructing a std::string from a null pointer is not allowed. You could use return ""; instead.

1
  • thanks bro, i think i should use void in function because function doesn't return anything to main. Feb 21, 2015 at 4:34
0

Here, try this

#include <stdio.h>
#include<iostream>
using namespace std;
class exp
 {
  private:                  // changed from public to private
  string name;    
  public: 
  int  fun1()               // changed from string to int
   {
     cout<<"\nplease enter value for first function  ";
     cin>>name;
     cout<<"\nyourname from first function is  ";cout<<name<<endl;
     return 0; 
   }
  int fun2()                // changed from string to int
   {
     cout<<"\nPlease enter value for second function  ";
     cin>>name;
     cout<<"\nyourname from second function is ";
     cout<<name<<endl;
     return 0;
   }    
 };
int main()
 {
   exp b1,b2;
   b2.fun1();            // removed cout
   b1.fun2();            // removed cout    
 }

The problem was you were using cout inside your functions, yet you were also calling them inside a function, that is cout<<b2.fun1();. This is not a good practice.

There was also the problem that the type of your functions were string, but they were returning an integer.

You had also made name as public which just defies the use of OOP. So I made it private.

Cheers......Hope this solves your Problems.. :)

2
  • How does using std::cout to print the result of a function that uses std::cout matter (in terms of bugs, not best practices)?
    – chris
    Feb 20, 2015 at 15:09
  • It prints the return value as well. If the return value was something like a white space, it wouldn't have mattered. I just pointed it out. I've edited my post
    – Arun A S
    Feb 20, 2015 at 15:12

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