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How do I how to I swap variable values in C++?
If I have int valueA = 8; int valueB = 11; How do I swap the values ? I am knew right coding and I’m stumped here.
26 Réponses
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What you should really do is simply this:
int valueA = 8;
int valueB = 11;
int temp = valueA;
valueA = valueB;
valueB = temp;
The other methods are fun but not really applicable most of the time. C++ also has a `swap` function but using it is probably not the point of the exercise :p
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my favorite is the bitwise operator jaja
https://code.sololearn.com/c26o4pSfqFJL/?ref=app
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We can swap two numbers without using third variable. There are two common ways to swap two numbers without using third variable:
By + and -
By * and /
//
https://www.javatpoint.com/cpp-program-to-swap-two-numbers-without-third-variable
https://www.programiz.com/cpp-programming/examples/swapping
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Quoi Runtime the swap function is defined like
template < class T >
void swap(T& a, T& b);
the function arguments are reference variables.
If the term reference is new to you, check here:
https://stackoverflow.com/questions/57483/what-are-the-differences-between-a-pointer-variable-and-a-reference-variable-in
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Cristian Gabriel Mazzulla This is horrible I'm sorry:
https://code.sololearn.com/c7UT41h7ab1P/?ref=app
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Quoi Runtime A reference is actually a const pointer behind the scenes. C++ just hides the memory operators from you, for ease of use.
Using "&" to mean two things—"reference-to" and "addres-of"—is pretty confusing. I'm not sure why they picked the same symbol..
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Cristian Gabriel Mazzulla i got it thank you!
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Rishi I can try, surely you know that computers work with bits, ones and zeros. The values of each variable are stored in their binary representation, in this case we have 8 and 11, which in binary are .. 1000 and 1011 respectively If I'm not mistaken..
The XOR operator, or Exclusive OR, Compare two values (in this case) and return true (or in this case 1) if 1 and only 1 of the inputs is true (odd true inputs in the case of 3 or more inputs)
Applying this comparator Bit by Bit, We obtain that "a^=b^=a^=b" is equivalent to:
(remember that a=1000 and b=1011 in binary)
•First a=a^b:
a=1000 ^
b=1011
_____
0011 //So a=0011, Nothing for now
•Then b=b^a:
b=1011 ^
a=0011
_____
b=1000 //b is now 1000 (8 in decimal)
•Finally a=a^b:
a=0011 ^
b=1000
_____
a=1011 //Ready! a is 1011 (11 in base 10)
I hope I was clear, now I am attaching a couple of links from here on SoloLearn ..
https://www.sololearn.com/learn/4070/?ref=app
https://www.sololearn.com/learn/4074/?ref=app
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A=A+B
B=A-B
A=A-B
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Schindlabua I am intrigued, in which case my beloved bitwise xor operator would not be applicable? I'm a bit of a noob yet haha
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Schindlabua Oh wow, this also works:
swap(valueA, valueB);
But I ain't passing a reference to the swap function. Then how come the values get changed in the main's scope?
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Schindlabua I see, that's cool
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Cristian Gabriel Mazzulla sorry, I only saw that post just now!
Xor swap works fine for numbers but for everything else it becomes iffy. Say you have a custom `Point` class and two objects that you want to swap, in that case xor will get you nowhere.
(Either `Point` has no xor operator defined in which case the code won't compile, or it has a custom xor operator that might do anything. Not ideal either since the xor swap relies on the fact that you are doing a bitwise operation.)
Though, at the end of the day, the main reason why I prefer the good old temp variable is because it's clear, and readable. `a^=b^=a^=b` is a cute brain-teaser and it's really cool that it works at all, but unless you have seen this exact sequence of symbols before it'll mean nothing to you and you have to spend 10 minutes figuring it out. And nobody wants that, code is meant to be read, and understood!
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Schindlabua you are absolutely right, without getting to the case of the two custom objects, the bitwise xor operator doesn't even work with floats or doubles...
And it is true that whoever has not seen it before will have to investigate what it means, that's how it was for me haha
In the end, using a temp variable is the best.
Thank you, I hope I get a chance to show off some of this in college ..😆
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Thank you all !
Schindlabua - I used your suggestion. Solved
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Nikhil That's pretty weird, why doesn't the reference variable need the mem loc to the variable instead of the variable? Like, why isn't it more like this:
int &foo = &var; // rather than just var
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Manav Roy i couldnt get the variable swap to do anything in C++
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#include<iostream>
usung namespace std;
int main()
{
int a,b,c;
cin>>a>>b;
c=a+b;
cout<<c;
return 0;
}
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Cristian Gabriel Mazzulla can you explain how the xor swap works plz? I couldn't get it😅
0
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