Return string array in C++ function
I am new to C++. For a school project I need to make a function which will be able to return a string array.
Currently I have this in my header:
Config.h
string[] getVehicles(void);
Config.cpp
string[] Config::getVehicles(){
string test[5];
test[0] = "test0";
test[1] = "test1";
test[2] = "test2";
test[3] = "test3";
test[4] = "test4";
return test;}
Obviously this does not work but that's the idea of what I am trying to do. In Java开发者_运维问答 this would be the way to do it. I've tried googling my problem but I didn't come across any answers that were clear to be honest.
Maybe it is better to use a vector in this case, but this is not a correct answer for the question. The reason why it doesn't work is that the variable test just exists in the scope of your function. So you have to manage the memory on your own. Here is an example:
string* getNames() {
string* names = new string[3];
names[0] = "Simon";
names[1] = "Peter";
names[2] = "Dave";
return names;
}
In this case you return a pointer of the position in the heap. All the memory in the heap has to free manually. So it is now your work to delete the memory, if you don't need it anymore:
delete[] names;
In C++ you don't use an array, but a std::vector
instance. Arrays in C++ must have a compile-time fixed length while std::vector
instances can change their length at runtime.
std::vector<std::string> Config::getVehicles()
{
std::vector<std::string> test(5);
test[0] = "test0";
test[1] = "test1";
test[2] = "test2";
test[3] = "test3";
test[4] = "test4";
return test;
}
std::vector
can also grow dynamically, so in a C++ program you will find more often something like
std::vector<std::string> Config::getVehicles()
{
std::vector<std::string> test; // Empty on creation
test.push_back("test0"); // Adds an element
test.push_back("test1");
test.push_back("test2");
test.push_back("test3");
test.push_back("test4");
return test;
}
Allocating dynamically an array of std::string
is technically possible but a terrible idea in C++ (for example C++ doesn't provide the garbage collector that Java has).
If you want to program in C++ then grab a good C++ book and read it cover to cover first... writing Java code in C++ is a recipe for a disaster because the languages, despite the superficial braces similarity, are very very different in many fundamental ways.
Try this
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
using namespace std;
string * essai()
{
string * test = new string[6];
test[0] = "test0";
test[1] = "test1";
test[2] = "test2";
test[3] = "test3";
test[4] = "test4";
cout<<"test et *test\t"<<&test<<' '<<*(&test)<<'\n';
return test;
}
main()
{
string * toto;
cout<<"toto et *toto\t"<<&toto<<' '<<*(&toto)<<'\n';
toto = essai();
cout<<"**toto\t"<<*(*(&toto))<<'\n';
cout<<"toto\t"<<&toto<<' '<<*(&toto)<<'\n';
for(int i=0; i<6 ; i++)
{
cout<<toto[i]<<' '<<&toto[i]<<'\n';
}
}
For example, in my computer, the result is
toto et *toto 0x7ffe3a3a31b0 0x55dec837ae20
test et *test 0x7ffe3a3a3178 0x55dec9ddd038
**toto test0
toto 0x7ffe3a3a31b0 0x55dec9ddd038
test0 0x55dec9ddd038
test1 0x55dec9ddd058
test2 0x55dec9ddd078
test3 0x55dec9ddd098
test4 0x55dec9ddd0b8
0x55dec9ddd0d8
Getting addresses and contents of addresses could help you to understand that an array in c++ is really rudimentary : it offers no methods and you could access an index without allocating memory (the value 6 in the loop). Your first example show a direct allocation of a local array (test), so you can't return it (the local array dies), in this example, the local variable dies also but there is always a variable that access at this part of allocated memory, the function, and then the variable that receive the result of the function, so the variable test is dead after the calling of the function but the memory is still allocated. Regards.
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