Probably
the best way to start learning a programming language is by writing a program.
Therefore, here is our first program:
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// my first program in C++
#include <iostream>
using namespace
std;
int main ()
{
cout << "Hello World!";
return 0;
}
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The
way to edit and compile a program depends on the compiler you are using.
Depending on whether it has a Development Interface or not and on its version.
Consult the compilers section and the manual or help included with your
compiler if you have doubts on how to compile a C++ console program.
The
previous program is the typical program that programmer apprentices write for
the first time, and its result is the printing on screen of the "Hello
World!" sentence. It is one of the simplest programs that can be written
in C++, but it already contains the fundamental components that every C++
program has. We are going to look line by line at the code we have just
written:
// my first program in
C++
This is a comment line. All lines beginning with two slash
signs (//)
are considered comments and do not have any effect on the behavior of the
program. The programmer can use them to include short explanations or
observations within the source code itself. In this case, the line is a brief
description of what our program is.
#include
<iostream>
Lines beginning with a hash sign (#) are directives for the preprocessor. They are not regular
code lines with expressions but indications for the compiler's preprocessor. In
this case the directive #include <iostream> tells the preprocessor to include the iostream standard
file. This specific file (iostream) includes the declarations of the basic
standard input-output library in C++, and it is included because its
functionality is going to be used later in the program.
using namespace std;
All the elements of the standard C++ library are declared
within what is called a namespace, the namespace with the name std. So
in order to access its functionality we declare with this expression that we
will be using these entities. This line is very frequent in C++ programs that
use the standard library, and in fact it will be included in most of the source
codes included in these tutorials.
int main ()
This line corresponds to the beginning of the definition of
the main function. The main function is the point by where all C++ programs
start their execution, independently of its location within the source code. It
does not matter whether there are other functions with other names defined
before or after it - the instructions contained within this function's
definition will always be the first ones to be executed in any C++ program. For
that same reason, it is essential that all C++ programs have a main function.
The word main is followed in the code by a pair of parentheses (()). That is because it is a function declaration: In C++,
what differentiates a function declaration from other types of expressions are
these parentheses that follow its name. Optionally, these parentheses may
enclose a list of parameters within them.
Right after these parentheses we can find the body of the
main function enclosed in braces ({}). What is contained within these braces is what the
function does when it is executed.
cout <<
"Hello World!";
This line is a C++ statement. A statement is a simple or
compound expression that can actually produce some effect. In fact, this
statement performs the only action that generates a visible effect in our first
program.
cout is the name of the standard output stream in C++, and the
meaning of the entire statement is to insert a sequence of characters (in this
case the Hello World sequence of characters) into the standard output stream (cout,
which usually corresponds to the screen).
cout is
declared in the iostream standard file within the std namespace,
so that's why we needed to include that specific file and to declare that we
were going to use this specific namespace earlier in our code.
Notice that the statement ends with a semicolon character (;). This character is used to mark the end of the statement
and in fact it must be included at the end of all expression statements in all
C++ programs (one of the most common syntax errors is indeed to forget to
include some semicolon after a statement).
return 0;
The return statement causes the main function to finish.
return may be followed by a return code (in our example is followed by the
return code with a value of zero). A return code of 0 for the main
function is generally interpreted as the program worked as expected without any
errors during its execution. This is the most usual way to end a C++ console
program.
You
may have noticed that not all the lines of this program perform actions when
the code is executed. There were lines containing only comments (those
beginning by //).
There were lines with directives for the compiler's preprocessor (those
beginning by #).
Then there were lines that began the declaration of a function (in this case,
the main function) and, finally lines with statements (like the insertion into cout),
which were all included within the block delimited by the braces ({}) of the main function.
The
program has been structured in different lines in order to be more readable,
but in C++, we do not have strict rules on how to separate instructions in
different lines. For example, instead of
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int main ()
{
cout << " Hello World!";
return 0;
}
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We
could have written:
int main () { cout
<< "Hello World!"; return 0; }
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All
in just one line and this would have had exactly the same meaning as the
previous code.
In
C++, the separation between statements is specified with an ending semicolon (;) at the end of each one, so the separation in different
code lines does not matter at all for this purpose. We can write many
statements per line or write a single statement that takes many code lines. The
division of code in different lines serves only to make it more legible and
schematic for the humans that may read it.
Let
us add an additional instruction to our first program:
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// my second program in C++
#include <iostream>
using namespace
std;
int main ()
{
cout << "Hello World! ";
cout << "I'm a C++ program";
return 0;
}
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Hello World! I'm a C++ program
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In
this case, we performed two insertions into cout in two different statements.
Once again, the separation in different lines of code has been done just to
give greater readability to the program, since main could have been
perfectly valid defined this way:
int main () { cout
<< " Hello World! "; cout << " I'm a C++ program
"; return 0; }
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We
were also free to divide the code into more lines if we considered it more
convenient:
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int main ()
{
cout
<<
"Hello World!";
cout
<<
"I'm a C++ program";
return 0;
}
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And
the result would again have been exactly the same as in the previous examples.
Preprocessor
directives (those that begin by #) are out of this general rule since they are not
statements. They are lines read and processed by the preprocessor and do not
produce any code by themselves. Preprocessor directives must be specified in
their own line and do not have to end with a semicolon (;).
Comments
Comments
are parts of the source code disregarded by the compiler. They simply do
nothing. Their purpose is only to allow the programmer to insert notes or
descriptions embedded within the source code.
C++
supports two ways to insert comments:
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// line comment
/* block comment */
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The
first of them, known as line comment, discards everything from where the pair
of slash signs (//)
is found up to the end of that same line. The second one, known as block
comment, discards everything between the /* characters and the first appearance of the */ characters, with the possibility of including more than one
line.
We
are going to add comments to our second program:
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/* my second program in C++
with more comments */
#include <iostream>
using namespace
std;
int main ()
{
cout << "Hello World! "; // prints Hello //World!
cout << "I'm a C++ program"; // prints
I'm a //C++ //program
return 0;
}
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//Hello World! I'm a C++ //program
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If
you include comments within the source code of your programs without using the
comment characters combinations //, /*
or */, the compiler will take them as if
they were C++ expressions, most likely causing one or several error messages
when you compile it.
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