Working my way through accelerated c++. There's an example where there are multiple things that I do not understand.
double grade = 88;
static const double numbers[] = { 97,94,90,87,84,80,77,74,70,60,0 };
static const char* const letters[] = { "A+","A","A-","B+","B","B-","C+","C","C-","D","F" };
static const size_t ngrades = sizeof(numbers) / sizeof(*numbers);
for (size_t i = 0;i < ngrades;++i) {
if (grade >= numbers[i]) {
cout << letters[i];
break;
}
}
static const char* const letters[] = (...). First of all, I always thought a char was a single character delimited by '. Single or more characters delimited by " are for me a string. int* p=&x;. They have the advantage of being able to be used like an iterator (kind of). But I really do not get what is going on here, we declare a pointer letters that gets assigned to it an array of values (not addresses), what does that mean? What would be a reason for doing this?Regarding your first question, a string literal (like e.g. "A+") is an (read-only) array of characters, and as all arrays they can decay to pointers to their first element, i.e. a pointer to char. The variable letters is an array of constant pointers (the pointer in the array can't be changed) to characters that are constant.
For the third questions, what static means is different depending on which scope you declare the variable in. It's a linkage specifier when used in the global scope, and means that the variable (or function) will not be exported from the translation unit. If use for a variable in local scope (i.e. inside a function) then variable will be shared between invocations of the function, i.e. all calls to the function will have the same variable with the the value of it being kept between calls. Declaring a class-member as static means that it's shared between all object instances of the class.
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