Functions allow programmers to organize code into segments that perform specific tasks. In C++, a function is defined with a return type, name, and parameters. The function body contains statements that are executed when the function is called. For example, a function named "addition" is defined to take two integer parameters, add them together, and return the result. This function is called from the main function, which passes the arguments 5 and 3. The addition function executes, returning 8, which is stored in the variable z and printed out.
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Functions: // Function Example
Functions allow programmers to organize code into segments that perform specific tasks. In C++, a function is defined with a return type, name, and parameters. The function body contains statements that are executed when the function is called. For example, a function named "addition" is defined to take two integer parameters, add them together, and return the result. This function is called from the main function, which passes the arguments 5 and 3. The addition function executes, returning 8, which is stored in the variable z and printed out.
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Functions
Functions allow to structure programs in segments of code to perform individual tasks.
In C++, a function is a group of statements that is given a name, and which can be called from some point of the program. The most common syntax to define a function is:
type name ( parameter1, parameter2, ...) { statements }
Where: - type is the type of the value returned by the function. - name is the identifier by which the function can be called. - parameters (as many as needed): Each parameter consists of a type followed by an identifier, with each parameter being separated from the next by a comma. Each parameter looks very much like a regular variable declaration (for example: int x), and in fact acts within the function as a regular variable which is local to the function. The purpose of parameters is to allow passing arguments to the function from the location where it is called from. - statements is the function's body. It is a block of statements surrounded by braces { } that specify what the function actually does.
Let's have a look at an example: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 // function example #include <iostream> using namespace std;
int addition (int a, int b) { int r; r=a+b; return r; }
int main () { int z; z = addition (5,3); cout << "The result is " << z; } The result is 8
This program is divided in two functions: addition and main. Remember that no matter the order in which they are defined, a C++ program always starts by calling main. In fact, main is the only function called automatically, and the code in any other function is only executed if its function is called from main (directly or indirectly).
In the example above, main begins by declaring the variable z of type int, and right after that, it performs the first function call: it calls addition. The call to a function follows a structure very similar to its declaration. In the example above, the call to addition can be compared to its definition just a few lines earlier:
The parameters in the function declaration have a clear correspondence to the arguments passed in the function call. The call passes two values, 5 and 3, to the function; these correspond to the parameters a and b, declared for function addition.
At the point at which the function is called from within main, the control is passed to function addition: here, execution of main is stopped, and will only resume once the addition function ends. At the moment of the function call, the value of both arguments (5 and 3) are copied to the local variables int a and int b within the function.
Then, inside addition, another local variable is declared (int r), and by means of the expression r=a+b, the result of a plus b is assigned to r; which, for this case, where a is 5 and b is 3, means that 8 is assigned to r.
The final statement within the function: return r;