C++ Tutorial
C++ Constants/Literals
Constants
refer to fixed values that the program may not alter and they are called literals.
Constants
can be of any of the basic data types and can be divided into Integer Numerals,
Floating-Point Numerals, Characters, Strings and Boolean Values.
Again,
constants are treated just like regular variables except that their values
cannot be modified after their definition.
Integer literals:
An integer
literal can be a decimal, octal, or hexadecimal constant. A prefix specifies
the base or radix: 0x or 0X for hexadecimal, 0 for octal, and nothing for
decimal.
An integer
literal can also have a suffix that is a combination of U and L, for unsigned
and long, respectively. The suffix can be uppercase or lowercase and can be in
any order.
Here are
some examples of integer literals:
212 // Legal
215u // Legal
0xFeeL // Legal
078 // Illegal: 8 is not an octal digit
032UU // Illegal: cannot repeat a suffix
Following
are other examples of various types of Integer literals:
85 // decimal
0213 // octal
0x4b // hexadecimal
30 // int
30u // unsigned int
30l // long
30ul // unsigned long
Floating-point
literals:
A
floating-point literal has an integer part, a decimal point, a fractional part,
and an exponent part. You can represent floating point literals either in
decimal form or exponential form.
While
representing using decimal form, you must include the decimal point, the
exponent, or both and while representing using exponential form, you must
include the integer part, the fractional part, or both. The signed exponent is
introduced by e or E.
Here are
some examples of floating-point literals:
3.14159 // Legal
314159E-5L // Legal
510E // Illegal: incomplete exponent
210f // Illegal: no decimal or exponent
.e55 // Illegal: missing integer or fraction
Boolean literals:
There are
two Boolean literals and they are part of standard C++ keywords:
·
A value of true representing true.
·
A value of false representing false.
You should
not consider the value of true equal to 1 and value of false equal to 0.
Character literals:
Character
literals are enclosed in single quotes. If the literal begins with L (uppercase
only), it is a wide character literal (e.g., L'x') and should be stored in wchar_t type of variable . Otherwise, it is a
narrow character literal (e.g., 'x') and can be stored in a simple variable ofchar type.
A
character literal can be a plain character (e.g., 'x'), an escape sequence
(e.g., '\t'), or a universal character (e.g., '\u02C0').
There are
certain characters in C++ when they are preceded by a backslash they will have
special meaning and they are used to represent like newline (\n) or tab (\t).
Here, you have a list of some of such escape sequence codes:
Escape
sequence
|
Meaning
|
\\
|
\ character
|
\'
|
' character
|
\"
|
"
character
|
\?
|
? character
|
\a
|
Alert or
bell
|
\b
|
Backspace
|
\f
|
Form feed
|
\n
|
Newline
|
\r
|
Carriage
return
|
\t
|
Horizontal
tab
|
\v
|
Vertical tab
|
\ooo
|
Octal number
of one to three digits
|
\xhh . . .
|
Hexadecimal
number of one or more digits
|
Following
is the example to show few escape sequence characters:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
cout << "Hello\tWorld\n\n";
return 0;
}
When the
above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result:
Hello World
String literals:
String
literals are enclosed in double quotes. A string contains characters that are
similar to character literals: plain characters, escape sequences, and
universal characters.
You can
break a long line into multiple lines using string literals and separate them
using whitespaces.
Here are
some examples of string literals. All the three forms are identical strings.
"hello, dear"
"hello, \
dear"
"hello, " "d" "ear"
Defining Constants:
There are
two simple ways in C++ to define constants:
·
Using #define preprocessor.
·
Using const keyword.
The #define
Preprocessor:
Following
is the form to use #define preprocessor to define a constant:
#define identifier value
Following
example explains it in detail:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
#define LENGTH 10
#define WIDTH 5
#define NEWLINE '\n'
int main()
{
int area;
area = LENGTH * WIDTH;
cout << area;
cout << NEWLINE;
return 0;
}
When the
above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result:
50
The const Keyword:
You can
use const prefix to declare constants with a
specific type as follows:
const type variable = value;
Following
example explains it in detail:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
const int LENGTH = 10;
const int WIDTH = 5;
const char NEWLINE = '\n';
int area;
area = LENGTH * WIDTH;
cout << area;
cout << NEWLINE;
return 0;
}
When the
above code is compiled and executed, it produces the following result:
50
Note that
it is a good programming practice to define constants in CAPITALS.
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