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I need to append a number at the end of the word flare depending on how many I have. That part works great. My problem is when I go to print it to the screen. I would like the program to output the value of what (Camera::Table[Id]->sensor->flare1) sensor is pointing at, in this case, flare one. If the program were to continue it would output the value pointing at flare2, flare3, flare4,... until the limit is reached.
What I get as the output is the following:

lens_pos1=¨Camera::Table[Id]->sensor->flare1¨ 
lens_pos2=¨Camera::Table[Id]->sensor->flare2¨ .......  

How can I output the value of flare1 instead of pasting the string?

What I want is the following:

lens_pos1=¨10.3¨ lens_pos2=¨12.4¨..... 

Where the values 10.3, 12.4 would be those of flare1 and flare2 respectively taken from a seperate C file.

for(int i = 1; i <= nbflares; i++)  
{  
    char integer_string[32];  
    sprintf(integer_string, "%d", i);  
    char flare[100] = "Camera::Table[Id]->sensor->flare";

    strcat(flare,integer_string);

    fprintf(yyout, "lens_pos%d=\"%s\" ",i,flare);
}
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  • What type is Camera::Table[Id]->sensor, and what type is Camera::Table[Id]->sensor->flare? Oct 27, 2010 at 22:09
  • In the file that defines all the structures,I have the following:
    – gianx
    Oct 27, 2010 at 22:17
  • In the file that defines all the structures,I have the following: Camera //constructor destructor in Camera I have sensor, light in sensor, I have: float flare = 10.2 //flare1,flare2,.. float flarescale = 11.2 //flarescale1,flarescale2,... char* flaretext = 12.2 //flaretext1,flaretext2,... These are the members I want to access generically instead of pasting a bunch of code with all kinds of if statements accessing each one by one. Is there a way to access them without the use of arrays?
    – gianx
    Oct 27, 2010 at 22:24
  • Can you paste a working, stripped down version of that structure into the question? I can't really read it when it's formatted like this. The reason I ask is that the question and answer should be clear to other users, so that people asking similar questions in the future can search, find, and understand it. Oct 28, 2010 at 5:17

2 Answers 2

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You can't access a variable like that in C/C++. You have to redesign the "sensor" structure to contain an array instead of individual flares, and access the array by index: Camera::Table[Id]->sensor->flare[1], Camera::Table[Id]->sensor->flare[2], etc.

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  • @Merlyn Morgan-Graham: the question shows sensor->flare1, sensor->flare2, which supports this answer's relevance. Oct 28, 2010 at 4:37
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That can't be done in C++. Some interpreted languages might allow such things because the text of the source code still exists while the program is running. But in C++, when you compile a program all the names of classes and variables and such are essentially lost. When it gets to the point of a running executable, the actual machine instructions are just working with offsets and memory addresses.

So you need re-design how the data is stored.

Is there a way to access them without the use of arrays?

Technically, yes. But only by using a more complicated scheme that would involve a more complicated data structure (such as a linked list or map).

Why would you want to avoid arrays anyway? Right now you have a series of variables of the same type that you want to distinguish by the number are the end of their names. And an array is a series of variables of the same type that are distinguished by their index in the array. It's pretty much a perfect match.

For example, if you had a flares array, then you could simply do something like:

for(int i = 0; i < nbflares; i++)  
{  
    fprintf(yyout, "lens_pos%d=\"%f\" ", i, Camera::Table[Id]->sensor->flares[i]);
}
1
  • Thank you! I figured that there might be an easier way since I am just at the very beginning of my programming experiences. If arrays are the simplest way to go then that is the route I shall take. I was just hoping that there would be a line that I can add to the code to output it differently but I guess not.
    – gianx
    Oct 28, 2010 at 1:36

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