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C++ for new friends
Revision as of 16:32, 28 January 2014 by XXStealthNinjaX1337 (talk | contribs) (Created page with "'''It is recommended to use an IDE Tutorial how to set it up''' [http://www.cprogramming.com/code_blocks/ HERE] == Printing text to the screen == <nowiki> //Text that star...")
It is recommended to use an IDE Tutorial how to set it up HERE
Printing text to the screen
//Text that starts with "//" is ignored by the compiler //This is the library that allows you to use the "cout" and "endl" objects #include <iostream> //int main is where you will be writing your code example //int main(){code goes here} int main() { //std::cout is sending the text to your screen //std::endl creates a new line std::cout << "This text will appear on your sceen" << std::endl; std::cout << "This text will appear on your sceen" << std::endl; //Note: all statements must end with a ; such as above return 0; }
Using Data
#include <iostream> int main() { //Numbers in C can be stored in variables //Each type can store a different type of data //For example an int is created by typing keyword int followed by a name, for this example bill int bill; //this int can store Integers -3 -2 -1 0 1 2 3 etc bool tom; //can store true or false float jim; //can store a decimal char tommy; //this takes characters such as 'x' or 'b' //variables can be created with no data and set later in the program such as here bill = 5; tom = true; jim = 1.5; tommy = 'b'; //Just to prove everything works we will print these to the screen std::cout<< "BIL "<<bill<<std::endl; std::cout<< "TOM "<<tom<<std::endl; std::cout<< "JIM "<<jim<<std::endl; std::cout<< "TOMMY "<<tommy<<std::endl; //note tom will appear as 1 or 0 depending on the true/false state return 0; }
Conditions
#include <iostream> int main() { int bill = 5; char tommy = 'b'; //the if statement will look if the condition inside its brackets is true, //if it is it will run the block of code below //we are using the Equal to operator "==" to check if bill is equal to 5 //other operators include // != Not equal to //> Greater than //<= Less than or equal to //>= Greater than or equal to if(bill == 5) { tommy = 'X'; //because bill is equal to 5 tommy will become X } if(bill == 6) { tommy = 'Y'; //because bill is not equal to 6 this code is ignored } std::cout<< "TOMMY "<<tommy<<std::endl; return 0; }
Loops
#include <iostream> int main() { int bill = 5; char tommy = 'b'; //like if, the while loop will run code if the condition is true //unlike if, while loops do not stop until the condition becomes false //below we used the Not equal to operator to check if bill is not equal to 0 while (bill != 0) { std::cout<< "TOMMY "<<tommy<<std::endl; //while bill is not equal to 0 the loop will run and print out tommy bill--; //the loop will also reduce bill by 1 each time it runs //thanks to the decrement operator "bill--" bill could also be Incremented with "bill++" } return 0; }