3 ways actually, 2 of them have already been mentioned here. I would summarize along with reasons:
1) Declare the variable as Static:
void callMe()
{
static int count=0;
cout<<"I am called "<<++count<<" times!\n";
}
This works because the memory now creates a single copy of count, instead of creating one every time the function is called and then deleting it when the function is done.
Also worth noticing here is that count is still Local to the function i.e. if you try to do something like this:
int main()
{
int count;
callMe();
callMe();
callMe();
callMe();
cout<<"you called "<<count<<"functions!\n";
return 0;
}
count will still display a garbage value because the count for your function and count for your main are 2 different variables in 2 different locations.
2) Intialize a global variable:
int count=0;
void callMe()
{
cout<<"I am called "<<++count<<" times!\n";
}
In the above example, the variable has a scope that is global therefore the whole program uses a single copy of the variable, and hence the changes made somewhere will reflect everywhere in the program. You can use this approach if you need to monitor more than 2 functions. for eg:
int count=0;
void callMe()
{
cout<<"I am called "<<++count<<" times!\n";
}
void callMe2()
{
cout<<"I am called 2 "<<++count<<" times!\n";
}
int main()
{
callMe();
callMe();
callMe2();
callMe2();
cout<<"you called "<<count<<" functions!\n";
return 0;
}
Since count here is basically common to both the functions and the main, they all refer to the same value instead of making their own local copies. Could be messed up if you have variables with same name. To understand difference between global and static variable and their scope click here
3) Pass a reference of the variable:
void callMe(int &count)
{
cout<<"I am called "<<count++<<" times!\n";
}
void callMe2(int &count)
{
cout<<"I am called 2 "<<++count<<" times!\n";
}
int main()
{
int count=0;
callMe(count);
callMe(count);
callMe2(count);
callMe2(count);
cout<<"you called "<<count<<" functions!\n";
return 0;
}
This is probably the cleanest way to do this, the variable is local to the main (which would save you garbage collection complications) and since this is a pass by refrence, all changes made point to the same location in the memory. If you don't have a solid reason not to follow this, I would say use this.
Hope I didn't confuse you further, Happy hunting.