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Basic Concept of the Array | Intro to Arrays
Introduction to C++ | Mobile-Friendly
course content

Course Content

Introduction to C++ | Mobile-Friendly

Introduction to C++ | Mobile-Friendly

1. Basics
2. Variables
3. Conditional Statements
4. Loops
5. Intro to Arrays

bookBasic Concept of the Array

Imagine you have a list of students or a collection of the characteristics of the auto and you want to operate with this data in C++. It will be extremely inconvenient to store the values in single variables. To avoid such problems in C++ you can use arrays. The array is a collection of variables of the same type that stores multiple values.

To declare an array you should specify the type of variables it stores, its name, and the number of elements in square brackets. For example:

Here was declared the array students, which consists only of string variables and has 5 elements. To initialize the array print the elements s a list in curly brackets separated by coma:

The number of initialized values can be less than the number of array elements.

If you don’t know how many elements will have your array, just skip this parameter:

Each element has its position, the number of its place in the array, it is called index. The very first element has an index 0, the second has an index of 1, and so on:

For example, let's get information about our array of students. You can get access to the array’s element by array’s name and the element's index in square brackets:

12
string students[5] = {"Anna", "John", "Emma", "Ross", "Barney"}; cout << students[3];
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You can also reassign the elements of an array by its index:

123
string students[4] = {"Anna", "John", "Emma", "Ross"}; students[3] = "Julia"; cout << students[3];
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question-icon

Initialize the array numbers of 10 elements type of int, reassign the second element and print it. Remember that the second element will have an index of one less.

#include
using namespace std;

int main() {
    
= {1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10};
    numbers
= 5;
    cout << numbers
;

    return 0;
}

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Section 5. Chapter 1
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