I am learning about pointers and the new operator in class.
In my readArray function I am to read in a size. Use the size to dynamically create an integer array. Then assign the array to a pointer, fill it, and return the size and array.
I believe I’ve gotten that part corrected and fixed but when I try to sort the array, i get the error “uninitialized local variable temp used.”
The problem is though I get that error when I am trying to intialize it.
Any help appreciated thank you. Seeing my errors is very helpful for me.
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int* readArray(int&);
void sortArray(int *, const int * );
int main ()
{
int size = 0;
int *arrPTR = readArray(size);
const int *sizePTR = &size;
sortArray(arrPTR, sizePTR);
cout<<arrPTR[1]<<arrPTR[2]<<arrPTR[3]<<arrPTR[4];
system("pause");
return 0;
}
int* readArray(int &size)
{
cout<<"Enter a number for size of array.\n";
cin>>size;
int *arrPTR = new int[size];
for(int count = 0; count < (size-1); count++)
{
cout<<"Enter positive numbers to completely fill the array.\n";
cin>>*(arrPTR+count);
}
return arrPTR;
}
void sortArray(int *arrPTR, const int *sizePTR)
{
int *temp;
bool *swap;
do
{
swap = false;
for(int count = 0; count < (*sizePTR - 1); count++)
{
if(arrPTR[count] > arrPTR[count+1])
{
*temp = arrPTR[count];
arrPTR[count] = arrPTR[count+1];
arrPTR[count+1] = *temp;
*swap = true;
}
}
}while (swap);
}
You declared
tempas a pointer. You need to allocate it on the heap before dereferencing and assigning to it later. However perhaps a variable on the stack would be preferable?FYI: You should be aware of the memory leak in
readArrayas well which is leaving callers responsible for callingdelete []Edit: I hope this will help clear up some of the other problems.