sorry I thought you had those powers
Type: Posts; User: greatunknown
sorry I thought you had those powers
No it is not its actually
for(i=0; i<Measures.size(); i++)
sorry
Wow yeah, no more error...guess I didnt need the include "measure.h" in note...Thanks!
about pulling out the information from the vector, I guess Im asking exactly what the syntax is...I tried...
sorry by "Note" not being declared in this scope, I am referring to the declaration of vector<Note> Measures...that is where the error is occuring
if I have a class...
class Note {
private:
string step;
string octave;
string duration;
I have a multidimensional vector, with the first index being numbers 1-9 for amount of rows and the second being the values in that specific row...Whats the best way to add a int to a specific row......
Great thanks,
that seems like the most viable method, not sure if Ill be able to use the sort() function properly now, but whatever must be done must be done.
I have a class containing simple information for a music library such as artist name, album title, then a vector<string> for tracktitle, and vector<string> for tracknumber (using a string for...
Having trouble with my infix-to-postfix function...when I go through the function on paper with a simple test, for example, (1+2), it seems that my code should work, yet when I type in that same...
so i have an empty stack, i need "char d" to be assigned to the top of the stack, meaning the last thing pushed, in order to compare it with something else without having to pop the stack and then...
This may seem simple, but how should I assign a variable "d" to the top of a stack for use in comparing a string variable to the variable at the top of the stack?
yes i changed it to char *string1 = argv[1], etc....and i got it to compile, may not run well, but compiles....thank you very much
I am getting a "assignment makes integer from pointer without a cast" warning on these two lines of code...
char string1 = argv[1];
char string2 = argv[2];
mystrcpy_array(string1, string2);