Section 1.15 Summary
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Computer science is the study of problem solving.
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Computer science uses abstraction as a tool for representing both processes and data.
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Abstract data types allow programmers to manage the complexity of a problem domain by hiding the details of the data.
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C++ is a powerful object-oriented language.
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All variables must be declared before use in C++.
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C++ has typical built-in numeric types:
int
is for integers andfloat
anddouble
are used for floating point depending on the number of digits desired. -
The character data type
char
holds a single character which is encased in single quotes. -
Pointers are a type of variable that stores a memory address. To declare a pointer, an
*
is used before the variable name that is supposed to store the location. -
A statically allocated C++ array is an ordered collection of one or more C++ data values of identical type stored in contiguous memory.
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A vector is a dynamically allocated array with many useful methods.
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C++ strings are a sequential collection of zero or more characters.
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A hash table is used to store keys-value pairs. It applies a related hash function to the key in order to compute the location of the associated value. Look-up is typically very fast.
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A set is an unordered collection of unique values.
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Arrays, vectors, and strings are C++ sequential collections.
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Hash tables and sets are nonsequential collections of data.
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In C++, a function definition requires a name, a group of parameters, a return type, and a body.
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Non-fruitful functions in C++ must contain the keyword
void
in its function definition. -
You can pass variables by value as well as by reference in C++ functions. Passing by reference utilizes the use of pointers.
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Pass by reference is useful when you require a function to return multiple variables.
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To pass an array to a function you need to use an array parameter. The array parameter is denoted by the array variable name followed by set of square brackets ([ and ]).
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Defining a new meaning for an already existing operator (such as the arithmetic operators plus “+” or times “*”) is called overloading the operator. The operators ::, #, ., and ? are reserved and cannot be overloaded.
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Some operators such as =, [], () and -> can only be overloaded as member functions of a class and not as global functions.
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Classes allow programmers to implement abstract data types.
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Programmers can override standard methods as well as create new methods.
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Classes can be organized into hierarchies.
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A class constructor should always invoke the constructor of its parent before continuing on with its own data and behavior.
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