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I am sorry if this problem is obvious but I just can't figure out whats wrong with my code. Explanation below, here is the code:

#include <iostream>
#include <cmath>
#include <complex>

using namespace std;

int main(){

  //Variables:
  complex<double> c;  //Coordinate
  complex<double> zn;
  complex<double> znp1;


  double iteration;  //Iteration counter
  double limit = 1.0e3;  //zn must exceed limit


  double resolution = 50.0;     //Points/pixels per axis

  double realrangeplus =5.0;    //Coordinate system
  double realrangeminus = -5.0;
  double realsubdiv = (realrangeplus - realrangeminus)/resolution;

  double imagrangeplus = 5.0;
  double imagrangeminus = -5.0;
  double imagsubdiv = (imagrangeplus - imagrangeminus)/resolution;



  //cycle through real axis with c
  for(real(c) = realrangeminus; real(c) <= realrangeplus; real(c) = real(c) + realsubdiv){

    //cycle through imaginary axis with c
    for(imag(c) = imagrangeminus; imag(c) <= imagrangeplus; imag(c) = imag(c) + imagsubdiv){
      //==========================================

      iteration = 0.0;  //reset
      zn = (0.0, 0.0);
      znp1 = (0.0, 0.0);

      //Start iterating:
      do{
        iteration = iteration + 1.0; //count iterations

        zn = znp1;
        znp1 = zn*zn + c;

      }while(abs(zn)<=limit);



      cout << real(c) << " " << imag(c) << "      " << real(zn) << " " << imag(zn) << "    " << iteration << endl;

      //==========================================
    }

  }

  return 0;
}

And here is the error when compiling it with g++ mandelbrot_skript.cpp in an Ubuntu terminal or in eclipse:

mandelbrot_skript.cpp: In function ‘int main()’:
mandelbrot_skript.cpp:32:17: error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment
   for(real(c) = realrangeminus; real(c) <= realrangeplus; real(c) = real(c) + realsubdiv){
                 ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
mandelbrot_skript.cpp:32:79: error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment
   for(real(c) = realrangeminus; real(c) <= realrangeplus; real(c) = real(c) + realsubdiv){
                                                                               ^~~~~~~~~~
mandelbrot_skript.cpp:35:19: error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment
     for(imag(c) = imagrangeminus; imag(c) <= imagrangeplus; imag(c) = imag(c) + imagsubdiv){
                   ^~~~~~~~~~~~~~
mandelbrot_skript.cpp:35:81: error: lvalue required as left operand of assignment
     for(imag(c) = imagrangeminus; imag(c) <= imagrangeplus; imag(c) = imag(c) + imagsubdiv){

                                                                             ^~~~~~~~~~

I am trying to create an image of the mandelbrot set and the code might be entirely wrong but that's not the point.

I don't understand why there is an error message. There are no spelling mistakes as far as I can see, all the variables have the correct datatype (I think) and I have successfully tried adding and multiplying the real and imaginary part with normal double variables. This error only shows up when I do that inside of the for() function. Strangely the exact same code executes without a problem inside of an android app called "CPP N-IDE".

So basically, what am I doing wrong?

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2 Answers 2

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real(c) is a reader function. c.real(value) is the write function. source

Thus:

for (c.real(realrangeminus); real(c) <= realrangeplus; c.real(real(c) + realsubdiv)) {

etc.

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  • That fixed it, thank you. Do you know why the app didn't have a problem?
    – EVARATE
    Nov 4, 2019 at 20:14
  • 1
    @EVARATE because the app probably doesn't know what to do. code interpretation is quite difficult.
    – JHBonarius
    Nov 4, 2019 at 20:16
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cpp reference

For any pointer to an element of an array of complex named p and any valid array index i, reinterpret_cast(p)[2*i] is the real part of the complex number p[i], and reinterpret_cast(p)[2*i + 1] is the imaginary part of the complex number p[i]

So, as previously said, real(c) and imag(c) would be the reader methods for the reading of the variables, not the setting of them.

Further information about the use of complex numbers can be found on StackOverflow here

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