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Error with integers with leading 0s in an if statement
#include <iostream> using namespace std; int main() { int a; cout << "Enter Password\n"; cin >> a; if (a == 910) { cout << "Access Granted\n"; } else cout << "Access Denied"; return 0; } How come I can't use a password with a leading 0? For example, I tried setting up the password to be "0910" instead of "910" but it gives me an error. Why does the leading 0 affect it?
5 Réponses
+ 3
0nnn is an octal value, but 9 is obviously *not* a valid octal digit. So 0910 is not a valid integer.
Wouldn't it be much better to compare to a string anyway? You would avoid any such unwanted side-effects, and you would be able to use other alphanumerical characters in your password...
+ 19
Numbers starting with 0 are octal numbers and 0x hexadecimal...
010 = 8
+ 10
I don't know why it doesn't work for you but when I input 0910, I get the string "Access Granted"
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I am talking about the part in the code when I set "a" equal to 910. if I change it to 0910, it doesn't run. I am looking up the octal and hexadecimal info now and I don't quite get it.