1

Suppose I have a class as

class A {
  char a[15], b[11],c[17];
public:
  void names();

}
void A :: names() {
   char x[20];
   x=a;
   cout<<x;
   x=b;
   cout<<x;
   x=c;
   cout<<x;
} 

I want to copy data in x from each member of A one by one and use a for loop to represent the member names. is there a way in which I can store them? So something like-

    void A :: names() {
           char x[20];
           while(all members of A not traversed){
                 x=current member;
                 cout<<x;
                 update member;
          }
    }
4
  • Can you clarify what you want? The question is not clear. Mar 21, 2017 at 8:37
  • @Svaberg Thanks for the link Mar 21, 2017 at 13:49
  • @Joseph Thomas I will update my question, to clarify. Please do refer. Mar 21, 2017 at 13:52
  • @TanishaShrotriya Reflection is not part of the C/C++ language, see e.g. how can I add reflection to a c application. If you just want to store (key, value)-pairs, use a map. This will be a lot easier.
    – Svaberg
    Mar 23, 2017 at 3:23

2 Answers 2

1

Sounds like you want to iterate through a class's members. Like

for (variable in a's members) {
    a.x append variable's value
}

There is no trivial methods to iterate through a class's members. You should use a map instead, which provide iteration features among keys.

for (auto const& x : the_map) {
    x.first  // name or key
    x.second // value
}
1
  • Yes, I want to iterate through a classes members. I will try a map. Thank you Mar 21, 2017 at 13:48
0

The idiomatic way to do this in C++ is through pointers.

class A {
  char a[15], b[11],c[17];
  char *members[3] = {a, b, c}; // valid only for c++11 or above
public:
  void names();
};

void A::names() {
    for (char *x: members) {  // c++11 range loop...
        cout << x << endl;
    }
}

But except if you have strong reasons to use raw char arrays, std::string is generally simpler to use...

3
  • I'm very unfamiliar with pointers, that's why I went with char arrays. I will try your suggestion though!Thank You. Mar 21, 2017 at 14:51
  • @TanishaShrotriya: you cannot assign to an array, that's why I use pointers here. Beware: arrays and pointers are different animals and you should not use one for the other... Mar 21, 2017 at 14:55
  • Haha. I tried const char * instead of char *. I think that is where I erred. Mar 21, 2017 at 15:03

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