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Const

const int a; What's it? I have questions like this, but I don't study it yet.

4th Feb 2022, 12:22 PM
Андрей
Андрей - avatar
9 Respostas
+ 1
Const stands for constant. An example would be the irrational number Pi. It’s always the same and is never subject to change. Defining variables as const acts in the same fashion. A variable marked as const cant have it’s value changed after its been defined. There are ways to break the const rule in C++, but that is outside the scope of this conversation. Hope that helps.
6th Feb 2022, 12:33 AM
DinoBambino
+ 1
This means that variable of type int named a cannot change.
4th Feb 2022, 12:28 PM
Bartek
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Const is used because after you add const int or something the value of that int cannot be changed in redeclaration Ex: Const int pie = 3.14;
6th Feb 2022, 6:04 AM
akarsh
akarsh - avatar
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Int a be can't double a?
4th Feb 2022, 12:29 PM
Андрей
Андрей - avatar
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It can be any type but it can't be changed later
4th Feb 2022, 12:33 PM
Bartek
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It means, const int a =10; a=a+4; cout << a; Output: 10?
4th Feb 2022, 12:35 PM
Андрей
Андрей - avatar
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It rises error becuse you try to change it.
4th Feb 2022, 12:38 PM
Bartek
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int is the type (Pro tip: it's a good idea to be explicit about long or short) const marks it as a constant (i.e. immutable). Basically, it will give you an error if you try to change it somewhere. It's useful for constants you use throughout your code, for instance const maxSize = 100; in a program where you don't allow arrays (or other data structures such as lists) of size > 100
6th Feb 2022, 11:48 AM
Hiba al-Sayf
Hiba al-Sayf - avatar