In this tutorial, similarly to the Comma Adder Tutorial, we will be reading in data and then modifying it for output into another file.
However, this time, there will be another file of data that we will compare it with. We will remove duplicates from our output, and we will keep track of those duplicates and output them to another file. So, if our input for the first file is this:
1234567
2345678
3456789
and our input from the second file is this (I've colored the duplicate blue):
8573968
3958396
1234567
3058376
Our first output file will be this (with duplicate(s) removed):
2345678
3456789
and our second output file will be this (the duplicate(s)):
1234567
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Sunday, March 24, 2013
Thursday, March 7, 2013
Comma Adder
In a similar fashion to my 2 previous tutorials:
http://thecodingtutorials.blogspot.com/2013/01/simple-file-manipulation-in-console.html
http://thecodingtutorials.blogspot.com/2013/01/character-arrays-in-c.html
This tutorial will show a C++ program that takes input from a file called "input.txt" and outputs it to "output.txt", only this time, it will take input like this:
1234567
1234567
1234567
and output it with commas after the third digit on each line like this:
123,4567
123,4567
123,4567
http://thecodingtutorials.blogspot.com/2013/01/simple-file-manipulation-in-console.html
http://thecodingtutorials.blogspot.com/2013/01/character-arrays-in-c.html
This tutorial will show a C++ program that takes input from a file called "input.txt" and outputs it to "output.txt", only this time, it will take input like this:
1234567
1234567
1234567
and output it with commas after the third digit on each line like this:
123,4567
123,4567
123,4567
Monday, January 28, 2013
Character Arrays in C++
This tutorial will show you how to use char (character) arrays in c++. In case you don't know, in the coding world there are strings of text, e.g.:
"Hello world!"
and these strings can be divided into arrays of characters:
'H' + 'e' + 'l' + 'l' + 'o' + ' ' + 'w' + 'o' + 'r' + 'l' + 'd' + '!'
Each character within a string, file, network packet, or etc. can easily be accessed individually if you use a character array:
charArray[0] == 'H'
charArray[1] == 'e'
etc...
In this tutorial, we will be making a program that will read an input file (which is expected to be a series of phone numbers separated by commas), go through each character in the file and make some changes, and then output the result to another file.
"Hello world!"
and these strings can be divided into arrays of characters:
'H' + 'e' + 'l' + 'l' + 'o' + ' ' + 'w' + 'o' + 'r' + 'l' + 'd' + '!'
Each character within a string, file, network packet, or etc. can easily be accessed individually if you use a character array:
charArray[0] == 'H'
charArray[1] == 'e'
etc...
In this tutorial, we will be making a program that will read an input file (which is expected to be a series of phone numbers separated by commas), go through each character in the file and make some changes, and then output the result to another file.
Wednesday, January 16, 2013
Simple File Manipulation in a Console Application with C++
1234567
1234567
1234567
and output it to a file called "output.txt" that is formatted like this (standard CSV (Comma Separated Values) format, except with 25 columns per row maximum):
1234567,1234567,1234567,...(25 times)
1234567,1234567,1234567,...(25 times)
1234567,1234567,1234567,...(18 times)
Creating an Empty C++ Console Application in Visual Studio 2010
Tuesday, January 15, 2013
Visual Studio Express
If you want to create serious desktop programs (especially for Windows), I highly recommend that you use Visual Studio. Visual Studio is what is called an IDE, or in simple terms a application that you use to develop other applications with. With it you can write code in many popular Microsoft languages like c++ and C#.
This tutorial should help you pick the right version and get it installed.
This tutorial should help you pick the right version and get it installed.
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