I started off trying to write a function that would delete spaces from a string, but now that I've looked at a host of other peoples' solutions to that problem, I'm more just trying to understand exactly what went wrong in my code/why the std::cout << t << std::endl;
at the end doesn't output anything.
When I included std::cout << t[count];
during the loop (the statement that is commented out below) it correctly would output to the console: hereissometext
without spaces. When I have std::cout << t[0] << std::endl;
at the end, it correctly outputs h
, t[1]
as e
, t[2]
as r
, and so on. However, when I try to output t
at the end, it outputs blank space, and t.size()
outputs 0
.
I am fairly new to coding so forgive me if this is a completely obvious question.
std::string s = "here is some text";
std::string t = "";
int count = 0;
for (int i = 0; i < s.size(); i++) {
if (std::isalpha(s[i])) {
t[count]+=s[i];
// std::cout << t[count];
count++;
}
}
std::cout << t << std::endl;
push_back()
operations. Not so much an issue for an 18-character string like above, but for 18,000 or 18,000,000 characters, or when doing this many times... Something like, uh,std::erase(std::remove_if(s.begin(), s.end(), ::isspace), s.end());
or... similar? Even if you do need a copy, making a copy first and then stripping in-place is probably better...