You don't get a STD from a chicken.
Chicken Wings Chicken Wings Chicken Wings Chicken Wings Chicken Wings And Chicken Wings
The name of a chicken's house is the chicken coop.
A "eunuch chicken" is a male castrated chicken.
Boiled chicken, Backed chicken, Grilled chicken. As long as it isn't fried and does not have the skin on it chicken is good for dieting.
You can not fit a 100 foot chicken farm into a chicken.
#include<iostream> int main() { std::cout << "sin(1) = " << std::sin(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "cos(1) = " << std::cos(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "tan(1) = " << std::tan(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "asin(1) = " << std::asin(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "acos(1) = " << std::acos(1.0) << std::endl; std::cout << "atan(1) = " << std::atan(1.0) << std::endl; } Output: sin(1) = 0.841471 cos(1) = 0.540302 tan(1) = 1.55741 asin(1) = 1.5708 acos(1) = 0 atan(1) = 0.785398
#include<iostream> #include<vector> #include<string> std::vector<std::string> parse (const std::string& s, const char delim) { std::vector<std::string> result {}; auto start = 0U; auto end = s.find (delim); while (end != s.npos) { result.push_back (s.substr(start, end - start)); start = ++end; end = s.find (delim, start); } result.push_back (s.substr (start, s.npos - start)); return result; } std::vector<std::string> parse (const std::string& s, const std::string& delim) { std::vector<std::string> result {}; auto start = 0U; auto end = s.find (delim); while (end != s.npos) { result.push_back (s.substr(start, end - start)); start = end + delim.length(); end = s.find (delim, start); } result.push_back (s.substr (start, s.npos - start)); return result; } int main() { std::string str1 = "This is a string that will be parsed by a single-space delimiter."; std::string str2 = "This==is==a==string==that==will==be==parsed==by==equal==operator."; std::string str3 = "This string has no delimiter."; std::cout << str1 << std::endl; std::vector<std::string> v1 = parse (str1, ' '); for (auto i : v1 ) std::cout << i << std::endl; std::cout << std::endl; std::cout << str2 << std::endl; std::vector<std::string> v2 = parse (str2, "=="); for (auto i : v2 ) std::cout << i << std::endl; std::cout << std::endl; std::cout << str3 << std::endl; std::vector<std::string> v3 = parse (str3, '\\'); for (auto i : v3 ) std::cout << i << std::endl; std::cout << std::endl; }
The following example demonstrates all 4 loop structures in C++. #include<iostream> int main() { int i; std::cout<<"For loop...\n"<<std::endl; for(i=0; i<10; ++i) std::cout<<i; std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; std::cout<<"While loop...\n"<<std::endl; i=0; while(i<10) std::cout<<i++; std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; std::cout<<"Do-while loop...\n"<<std::endl; i=0; do { std::cout<<i; }while( ++i<10 ); std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; std::cout<<"Goto loop...\n"<<std::endl; i=0; again: std::cout<<i; if(++i<10) goto again; std::cout<<'\n'<<std::endl; } Output: For loop... 0123456789 While loop... 0123456789 Do-while loop... 0123456789 Goto loop... 0123456789
Mumps is not a STD.
Haemophilus is not a STD.
int main() { std::string first, last; std::cout << "Enter your first name: "; std::cin >> first; std::cout << "Enter your last name: "; std::cin >> last; }
std::cout << std::bitset<CHAR_BIT>( 876 ) << std::endl;
#include<iostream> int main() { int num1, num2; std::cout << "C++ addition program" << std::endl; std::cout << "Enter a number: "; std::cin >> num1; std::cout << "Enter another number: "; std::cin >> num2; std::cout << "The sum is " << num1 + num2 << std::endl; }
#include<iostream> #include<string> #include<sstream> #include<vector> #include<stack> std::string convert (const std::string& str) { std::string valid("abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyz"); std::string result; for (auto it=str.begin(); it!=str.end(); ++it) { // convert to lower case const char c = (char) tolower(*it); // ensure character is a letter if (valid.find(c)!=valid.npos) result += c; } return result; } bool equal (const std::string& a, const std::string& b) { return convert(a)==convert(b); } std::vector<std::string> get_words (const std::string& s) { std::vector<std::string> elems; std::stringstream ss (s); std::string item; while (std::getline(ss, item, ' ')) elems.push_back (item); return elems; } std::string remove_duplicates (const std::string& s) { std::vector<std::string> elems = get_words (s); std::stack<std::string> stack; while (!elems.empty()) { std::string last = elems.back(); elems.pop_back(); bool found = false; for (auto it=elems.begin(); !found && it!=elems.end(); ++it) found = equal(last, *it); if (!found) stack.push (last); } std::string result; while (!stack.empty()) { if (result.size()) result += ' '; result += stack.top(); stack.pop(); } return result; } int main() { std::string test_string ("The fox and and the hound."); std::string result = remove_duplicates (test_string); std::cout << "Test string:\t"" << test_string << ""\n"; std::cout << "Result:\t\t"" << result << ""\n" << std::endl; }
If you mean you cannot use a for loop, then use a while loop: int i=0 while( i++ < 100 ) std::cout << i << " "; std::cout << std::endl; Or a do-while loop: int i=0; do std::cout << ++i << " "; while( i<100 ); std::cout << std::endl; If these are not allowed either, use a procedural loop: int i=0; again: std::cout << ++i << " "; if( i<100 ) goto again; std::cout << std::endl; If even that is not allowed, then the only option is to hard-wire: std::cout << 1 << " " << 2 << " " << [etc] << 99 << " " << 100 << std::endl; It does seem a pointless exercise when a for loop exists specifically for counting iterations like this: for( int i=1; i<=100; ++i ) std::cout << i << " "; std::cout << std::endl;
Piles are not a STD; but infected fluids can be in or on them.
The acronym for standard is "STD."