we can access and assign values of the members of a structure in a number of ways. as mentioned earlier, the members themselves are not variables .they should be linked to the structure variables in order to make them meaningful members . for example the word title , has no meaning whereas the phrase 'title of book3' .the link between a members and a variable is established using the members operator '.' which is also known as 'dot operator ' or ' period operator '.
for example , book.price
is the variable representing the price of book1 and can be treated like any other ordinary variable
methods and variables inside the structure is callled structure member
A structure that is a member of another structure is a structure within a structure.
A private member of a class can only be accessed by methods of that class. A protected member of a class can only be accessed by methods of that class and by methods of a derived class of that class.
It is a pointer that points to a member of a structure.
column
Public, protected and private access members.
stacture beam............
The access control specifiers in C++ are...public - to denote that the member is accessible from any in scope codeprivate - to denote that the member is accessible only from within the containing classprotected - the same as private, except that derived classes are includedPrivate is the default for a class type object, while public is the default for a structure type object.
true or false
The dot member access operator (or, in simple terms, the period) specifies the hierarchy of namespaces.
Partially. Only when you buy the upgrade. If you are a tier one member, you don't have access to as much as a tier two member. In order to become a tier two member you must create a second account, and then buy a membership again. This will give you full access to everything.
You cannot. You have to be a member to access the member-only clubhouse.