Re: Using Vectors in classes - public access
On May 11, 8:45 am, andrewmor...@aol.com wrote:
On May 11, 1:14 pm, Keith Halligan <keith.halli...@gmail.com> wrote:
On May 11, 12:57 pm, andrewmor...@aol.com wrote:
Hello,
I've got a VC++ project containing multiple classes and a main
function. In one of the class functions, it reads from a text file and
places the data into a vector;
//
std::vector<std::vector<std::string> > applications (50,
std::vector<std::string>(12));
applications[colArr][0] = "Test1";
applications[colArr][1] = "Test2";
//
Which works fine for that classes function, however, I need for other
functions of the class, or potentially other classes to be able to
access the applications vector, most likely done through friend-ing
and inheritance.
I seem to be unable to get the applications vector to be publicly or
even privately declared inside the main class definition. I've tried
placing the vector definition in both sections, it causes
error C2059: syntax error : 'constant'
when I do.
Is there something I'm missing with this?
Thanks,
- Andy
-- Copy of UpdateFileArray.h ---
#ifndef _UPDATEFILEARRAY_H_
#define _UPDATEFILEARRAY_H_
#include <string>
#include <vector>
class UpdateFileArray
{
std::vector<std::vector<std::string> > applications (50,
std::vector<std::string>(12));
public:
void UpdateArray();
void ArrayLookUp();
friend class SearchVehicle;};
extern UpdateFileArray UFA;
#endif
Have a function in the vectors class to return a reference to the
vector.
One question though, why are you defining a vector of vector of
strings? Surely if you're just reading from a text file, a vector of
std::strings will be more than sufficent.- Hide quoted text -
- Show quoted text -
Hm, I'm a bit puzzled, what do you mean, return a reference to the
vector?
Also, vector of a vector of strings, since it needs to be two
dimentional. A line is read from the text file then split where spaces
occor, then the pieces are placed inside the vector.
Look at your class, you are ignoring the constructor(s) altogether.
Declare a ctor and initialize the vector-vector in its initialization
list.
The following is a declaration:
std::vector<std::vector<std::string> > applications;
.... while this is a definition:
std::vector<std::vector<std::string> >
applications (50, std::vector<std::string>(12));
.... and definitions are not allowed in a class declaration.
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <vector>
class UpdateFileArray
{
typedef std::vector<std::vector<std::string> > VecVecStr;
VecVecStr applications;
public:
UpdateFileArray()
: applications(10, std::vector<std::string>(10)) { }
// member functions
VecVecStr& getapp() { return applications; } // get ref to private v-
v
size_t size() const { return applications.size(); }
};
int main()
{
UpdateFileArray ufa;
std::cout << ufa.size() << std::endl;
std::vector<std::string> v(10, "some string");
typedef std::vector<std::vector<std::string> > VecVecStr;
VecVecStr& r_apps = ufa.getapp(); // seat the reference
r_apps.push_back(v);
std::cout << ufa.size() << std::endl;
}
Although i'm a little puzzled as well as to why you need a vector of
vectors as well.
If each line in the text file represents a Record composed of multiple
strings seperated by spaces, you should be storing std::vector<
Records > where a Record class reflects the fields involved.