问题
This is a generic question, so there is no actual code that I am trying to troubleshoot. But what I want to know is, can I use a for
loop to change the name of a variable in C? For instance, if I have part1
, part2
, part3
, part...
, as my variable names; is there a way to attach it to my loop counter so that it will increment with each passing? I toyed around with some things, nothing seemed to work.
回答1:
In C, you can't 'change the name of the loop variable' but your loop variable does not have to be determined at compile time as a single variable.
For instance, there is no reason in C why you can't do this:
int i[10];
int j;
j = /* something */;
for (i[j] = 0 ; i[j] < 123 ; i[j]++)
{
...
}
or event supply a pointer
void
somefunc f(int *i)
{
for (*i = 0; *i<10; *i++)
{
...
}
}
It's not obvious why you want to do this, which means it's hard to post more useful examples, but here's an example that uses recursion to iterate a definable number of levels deep and pass the innermost function all the counter variables:
void
recurse (int levels, int level, int max, int *counters)
{
if (level < levels)
{
for (counters[level] = 0;
counters[level] < max;
counters[level]++)
{
recurse (levels, level+1, max, counters);
}
return;
}
/* compute something using counters[0] .. counters[levels-1] */
/* each of which will have a value 0 .. max */
}
Also note that in C, there is really no such thing as a loop variable. In a for
statement, the form is:
for ( A ; B ; C ) BODY
Expression A
gets evaluated once at the start. Expression B
is evaluated prior to each execution of BODY
and the loop statement will terminate (and not execute BODY
) if it evaluates to 0. Expression C
is evaluated after each execution of BODY
. So you can if you like write:
int a;
int b = /* something */;
int c = /* something */;
for ( a=0; b<5 ; c++ ) { ... }
though it will not usually be a good idea.
回答2:
The answer is, as @user2682768 correctly remarked, an array. I am not sure whether you are aware of that and consciously do not want to use an array for some reason; your little experience doesn't give me enough information. If so, please bear with me.
But you'll recognize the structural similarity between part1
, part2
, part3
... and part[1]
, part[2]
, part[3]
. The difference is that the subscript of an array is variable and can be changed programmatically, while the subscript part of a variable name cannot because it is burned in at compile time. (Using macros introduces a meta compiling stage which lets you programmatically change the source before actually compiling it, but that's a different matter.)
So let's compare code. Say you want to store the square of a value in a variable whose name has the value as a suffix. You would like to do something like
int square1, square2, square3;
int i;
for(i=1; i<=3; i++)
{
square/i/ = i*i; /* /i/ to be replaced by suffix "i".
}
With arrays, that changes to
int square[4];
int i;
for(i=1; i<=3; i++)
{
/* the (value of) i is now used as an index in the array.*/
square[i] = i*i;
}
Your idea to change the variable name programmatically implies that all variables have the same type (because they would have to work in the same piece of code, like in my example). This requirement makes them ideally suited for array elements which all have to be of the same type. If that is too restrictive, you need to do something fancier, like using unions (but how do you know what's in it at any given moment? It's almost as if you had different variables to begin with), void pointers to untyped storage or C++ with templates.
回答3:
In C You cannot append to a variable name an expression that expands to a number and use it as a sort of suffix to access different variables that begin in the same way.
The closest you can get, is to "emulate" this behaviour using a switch construct, but there wouldn't be much of a point to try to do this.
What you asked for is more suited to scripting languages.
来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/29195908/is-it-possible-to-use-a-for-loop-to-change-a-variable-name-in-c