October 2011
Beginner to intermediate
1200 pages
35h 33m
English
Computers are precise, orderly machines. To store an item of information in a computer, you must identify both the storage location and how much memory storage space the information requires. One relatively painless way to do this in C++ is to use a declaration statement to indicate the type of storage and to provide a label for the location. For example, the program in Listing 2.2 has this declaration statement (note the semicolon):
int carrots;
This statement provides two kinds of information: the type of memory storage needed and a label to attach to that storage. In particular, the statement declares that the program requires enough storage to hold an integer, for which C++ uses the label int. The compiler ...
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