3

I want to have an array of objects. Each object has a constructor with one argument. My object array initialisation :

set s[]=new set[n]; // creates an array of n objects of class set

However, it says that I cannot do so, because my constructor requires an argument. My Constructor:

set(int size){}

I've understood the problem, but cant think of a good solution. What I can do, is either initialise each object seperately :

set s1(size);
set s2(size); //& so on.....

or remove the argument from constructor......both solutions are not quite satisfactory

Can anyone help me out to find a better solution to this ?

Note: 'size' value of each object is different/dynamic

2 Answers 2

4
#include <vector>
...
std::vector<set> s(n, set(x,y,z));

This will create a vector (a dynamically resizeable array) of n set objects, each a copy of set(x,y,z). If you want to use different constructors for various elements, or the same constructor with different arguments:

std::vector<set> s;      // create empty vector
s.push_back(set(x,y,z));
s.push_back(set(y,z,x));
...
... // repeat until s.size() == n
0
0

You can make a different constructor that takes no arguments and initializes the values, and then set the values of each variable in a loop

set() {
    this.size = 0;
}

and then in a for loop initialize each element with the desired size, using direct binding or a getter/setter functions.

for(int i = 0; i < n; i++) {
    s[i].size = value[i]; // or create a setter function
}
1
  • Yeah, I had the same thing in mind earlier, but I specifically wanted to initialise it using constructor. Thanks for the effort.
    – Sumedh
    Sep 22, 2013 at 17:18

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service, privacy policy and cookie policy

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.