Uniform Initialization
Uniform initialization, introduced in C++11, provides a consistent brace {} syntax for initializing variables, arrays, structs, and objects.
main.cpp
123int a {5}; // Initialize 'int' double b {3.14}; // Initialize 'double' char c {'A'}; // Initialize 'char'
Using braces {} avoids accidental narrowing conversions. For example, int a{3.5}; would cause a compile-time error.
Uniform initialization works consistently for both built-in and standard containers.
main.cpp
12345678910#include <array> #include <iostream> int main() { int numbers[] {1, 2, 3, 4}; // Built-in array std::array<int, 3> arr {10, 20, 30}; // `std::array` std::cout << numbers[3] << ", " << arr[2] << std::endl; }
You can initialize structs and classes directly using braces.
main.cpp
123456789101112#include <iostream> struct Point { int x; int y; }; int main() { Point p1 {7, 9}; // Uniform initialization for `struct` std::cout << "(" << p1.x << ", " << p1.y << ")" << std::endl; }
Uniform initialization gives a single, safe way to initialize any object using braces { }, reducing ambiguity and preventing narrowing errors.
Tack för dina kommentarer!
Fråga AI
Fråga AI
Fråga vad du vill eller prova någon av de föreslagna frågorna för att starta vårt samtal
Fantastiskt!
Completion betyg förbättrat till 14.29
Uniform Initialization
Svep för att visa menyn
Uniform initialization, introduced in C++11, provides a consistent brace {} syntax for initializing variables, arrays, structs, and objects.
main.cpp
123int a {5}; // Initialize 'int' double b {3.14}; // Initialize 'double' char c {'A'}; // Initialize 'char'
Using braces {} avoids accidental narrowing conversions. For example, int a{3.5}; would cause a compile-time error.
Uniform initialization works consistently for both built-in and standard containers.
main.cpp
12345678910#include <array> #include <iostream> int main() { int numbers[] {1, 2, 3, 4}; // Built-in array std::array<int, 3> arr {10, 20, 30}; // `std::array` std::cout << numbers[3] << ", " << arr[2] << std::endl; }
You can initialize structs and classes directly using braces.
main.cpp
123456789101112#include <iostream> struct Point { int x; int y; }; int main() { Point p1 {7, 9}; // Uniform initialization for `struct` std::cout << "(" << p1.x << ", " << p1.y << ")" << std::endl; }
Uniform initialization gives a single, safe way to initialize any object using braces { }, reducing ambiguity and preventing narrowing errors.
Tack för dina kommentarer!