Initializing char pointers with strings : char array « Data Types « C++ Tutorial






#include <iostream>
using std::cout;
using std::cin;
using std::endl;

int main() {
  const char* pstar1 = "AAA";
  const char* pstar2 = "BBBB";
  const char* pstar3 = "CCCCC";
  const char* pstar4 = "DDDDDD";
  const char* pstar5 = "EEEEEEE";
  const char* pstar6 = "FFFFFFFF";
  const char* pstr   = "GGGGGGGGG";

  cout << pstar1;
  cout << pstar2;
  cout << pstar3;
  cout << pstar4;
  cout << pstar5;
  cout << pstar6;
  return 0;
}
AAABBBBCCCCCDDDDDDEEEEEEEFFFFFFFF








2.20.char array
2.20.1.char array buffers
2.20.2.initialized string
2.20.3.Treating character arrays as strings.
2.20.4.Get line with buffer size for char array reading
2.20.5.Use cin.get() to read a string based on char array
2.20.6.Reverse case using array indexing.
2.20.7.Reverse a string in place.
2.20.8.Copying a string using array notation
2.20.9.Copying a string using pointer notation
2.20.10.Initializing char pointers with strings
2.20.11.Using an array of pointers to char
2.20.12.simple string variable
2.20.13.reads multiple lines, terminates on '$' character
2.20.14.reads string with embedded blanks
2.20.15.Read from keyboard and output char array
2.20.16.multidimensional char arrays