Could someone tell what is the correct way to work with a vector of arrays?
I declared a vector of arrays (vector<float[4]>
) but got error: conversion from 'int' to non-scalar type 'float [4]' reque开发者_开发百科sted
when trying to resize
it. What is going wrong?
You cannot store arrays in a vector
or any other container. The type of the elements to be stored in a container (called the container's value type) must be both copy constructible and assignable. Arrays are neither.
You can, however, use an array
class template, like the one provided by Boost, TR1, and C++0x:
std::vector<std::array<double, 4> >
(You'll want to replace std::array
with std::tr1::array
to use the template included in C++ TR1, or boost::array
to use the template from the Boost libraries. Alternatively, you can write your own; it's quite straightforward.)
Use:
vector<vector<float>> vecArray; //both dimensions are open!
There is no error in the following piece of code:
float arr[4];
arr[0] = 6.28;
arr[1] = 2.50;
arr[2] = 9.73;
arr[3] = 4.364;
std::vector<float*> vec = std::vector<float*>();
vec.push_back(arr);
float* ptr = vec.front();
for (int i = 0; i < 3; i++)
printf("%g\n", ptr[i]);
OUTPUT IS:
6.28
2.5
9.73
4.364
IN CONCLUSION:
std::vector<double*>
is another possibility apart from
std::vector<std::array<double, 4>>
that James McNellis suggested.
Every element of your vector is a float[4]
, so when you resize every element needs to default initialized from a float[4]
. I take it you tried to initialize with an int
value like 0
?
Try:
static float zeros[4] = {0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.0};
myvector.resize(newsize, zeros);
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