Reputation: 43
I am trying to initialize a pointer (*vectorName
) with a 2D vector 366 by 4.
Both
vector<int> *vectorName = new vector<int>(366, new vector<int>(4));
and
vector<int> *vectorName = new vector<int>(366, vector<int>(4));
do not work and give me the error
Error: no instance of constructor "std::vector, <_Ty, _Alloc>::vector [with_ty=int, _Alloc=std_allocator]" argument types are (const int, std::vector>*)
What can I do?
This is happening within the main function.
Upvotes: 4
Views: 18439
Reputation: 51840
I assume that you're trying to use a pointer to a vector in order to get a dynamic C-array of vectors. There's no reason to do that. You can use a vector of vectors instead:
vector< vector<int> >
You can initialize that like this:
vector< vector<int> > vec(4);
for (size_t i = 0; i < 4; ++i) {
vec[i].resize(366);
}
Usage example:
vec[3][365] = 3;
If however you really do want a pointer to such a vector:
vector< vector<int> >* vec = new vector< vector<int> >(4);
for (size_t i = 0; i < 4; ++i) {
(*vec)[i].resize(366);
}
(*vec)[3][365] = 3;
If your size is constant and you're using a C++11 compiler, you can use an easier way, std::array
:
array<array<int, 366>, 4> arr;
// Usage example
arr[3][365] = 3;
Or a pointer to a dynamically allocated one:
array<array<int, 366>, 4>* arr = new array<array<int, 366>, 4>;
// Usage example
(*arr)[3][365] = 3;
Upvotes: 3
Reputation: 4411
Are you trying to do this? This makes a 2D vector of vectors with int. It creates 366 vectors with a vector with size 4,where all items are initialized to zero. Now you have a 2D vector of 366 by 4.
vector<vector<int> > twod( 366, vector<int>(4,0));
and if you would like a pointer to this vector:
vector<vector<int> >* twodptr = &twod;
if you would really need this.
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 55609
vector<int> *vectorName = new vector<int>(366, vector<int>(4));
The above doesn't work because the vector constructor template (ignoring a few things) looks as follows:
vector <TYPE> (SIZE, variable of type TYPE);
And in vector<int>(366, vector<int>(4))
, vector <int> (4)
is not of type int
.
To create a vector
with 366 elements that are vector
of int
s of size 4:
vector<vector<int> > *vectorName = new vector<vector<int> >(366, vector<int>(4));
or, if you don't need a pointer: (which you quite possibly don't)
vector<vector<int> > vectorName(366, vector<int>(4));
As a side note, if it's a fixed size 2D vector
, why are you using vector
, and not just an array. This would be much simpler:
int arr[366][4];
Upvotes: 4