I am trying to dynamically allocate an array of base(Student) classes, and then assign pointers to derived(Math) classes to each array slot. I can get it to work by creating a single pointer to the base class, and then assigning that to a derived class, but when I attempt to assign to the pointer to a dynamically allocated array of base classes, it fails. I have posted the fragments of code that I am using below. So basically my question is, why isn't the dynamically allocated one working?
Student* studentList = new Student[numStudents];
Math* temp = new Math(name, l, c, q, t1, t2, f);
studentList[0] = temp;
/*Fragment Above Gives Error:
main.cpp: In function âint main()â:
main.cpp:55: error: no match for âoperator=â in â* studentList = tempâ
grades.h:13: note: candidates are: Student& 开发者_运维技巧Student::operator=(const Student&)*/
Student * testptr;
Math * temp = new Math(name, l, c, q, t1, t2, f);
testptr = temp
//Works
studentList[0]
is not a pointer (i.e. a Student *
), it's an object (i.e. a Student
).
It sounds a bit like what you need is an array of pointers. In which case, you should do something like:
Student **studentList = new Student *[numStudents];
Math *temp = new Math(name, l, c, q, t1, t2, f);
studentList[0] = temp;
In this snippet, the type of studentList
is Student **
. Therefore, the type of studentList[0]
is Student *
.
(Note that in C++, there are better, safer ways to do this, involving container classes and smart pointers. However, that's beyond the scope of the question.)
精彩评论