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Home/ Questions/Q 8355779
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Editorial Team
  • 0
Editorial Team
Asked: June 9, 20262026-06-09T09:58:12+00:00 2026-06-09T09:58:12+00:00

This may just be a simple mistake that I’m not seeing, but I think

  • 0

This may just be a simple mistake that I’m not seeing, but
I think I’m simply doing something wrong. Don’t worry I’m not using namespace std in my header
functions or anything which seemed to be this person’s issue [Question I read similar to
mine][1] [1]: Why am I getting string does not name a type Error?

I am getting 4 errors right now:

C:\Documents and Settings\Me\My
Documents\C++Projects\C++\RandomSentence\Nouns.h|8|error: ‘string’ in
namespace ‘std’ does not name a type|

C:\Documents and Settings\Me\My
Documents\C++Projects\C++\RandomSentence\Nouns.h|12|error: ‘string’ in
namespace ‘std’ does not name a type|

C:\Documents and Settings\Me\My
Documents\C++Projects\C++\RandomSentence\Nouns.h|13|error: ‘string’ in
namespace ‘std’ does not name a type|

C:\Documents and Settings\Me\My
Documents\C++Projects\C++\RandomSentence\Nouns.cpp|9|error: no
‘std::string Nouns::nounGenerator()’ member function declared in class
‘Nouns’|

||=== Build finished: 4 errors, 0 warnings ===|

Here is my header file:

class Nouns
{
    public:
        Nouns();
        std::string noun;
    protected:
    private:
        int rnp; // random noun picker
        std::string dog, cat, rat, coat, toilet, lizard, mime, clown, barbie, pig, lamp, chair, hanger, pancake, biscut, ferret, blanket, tree, door, radio;
        std::string nounGenerator()
};

And this is my cpp file:

#include "Nouns.h"
#include <iostream>

Nouns::Nouns()
{

}

std::string Nouns::nounGenerator(){
    RollRandom rollRandObj;

    rnp = rollRandObj.randNum;

    switch(rnp){
    case 1:
        noun = "dog";
        break;
    case 2:
        noun = "cat";
        break;
    case 3:
        noun = "rat";
        break;
    case 4:
        noun = "coat";
        break;
    case 5:
        noun = "toilet";
        break;
    case 6:
        noun = "lizard";
        break;
    case 7:
        noun = "mime";
        break;
    case 8:
        noun = "clown";
        break;
    case 9:
        noun = "barbie";
        break;
    case 10:
        noun = "pig";
        break;
    case 11:
        noun = "lamp";
        break;
    case 12:
        noun = "chair";
        break;
    case 13:
        noun = "hanger";
        break;
    case 14:
        noun = "pancake";
        break;
    case 15:
        noun = "biscut";
        break;
    case 16:
        noun = "ferret";
        break;
    case 17:
        noun = "blanket";
        break;
    case 18:
        noun = "tree";
        break;
    case 19:
        noun = "door";
        break;
    case 20:
        noun = "radio";
        break;
    }

    return noun;
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-09T09:58:14+00:00Added an answer on June 9, 2026 at 9:58 am

    You need to

    #include <string>
    

    <iostream> declares cout, cin, not string.

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