9.7. Fill-in functions¶
Occasionally you will see functions like addTime
written with a
different interface (different arguments and return values). Instead of
creating a new object every time addTime
is called, we could require
the caller to provide an “empty” object where addTime
can store the
result. Compare the following with the previous version:
void addTimeFill (const Time& t1, const Time& t2, Time& sum) {
sum.hour = t1.hour + t2.hour;
sum.minute = t1.minute + t2.minute;
sum.second = t1.second + t2.second;
if (sum.second >= 60.0) {
sum.second -= 60.0;
sum.minute += 1;
}
if (sum.minute >= 60) {
sum.minute -= 60;
sum.hour += 1;
}
}
One advantage of this approach is that the caller has the option of reusing the same object repeatedly to perform a series of additions. This can be slightly more efficient, although it can be confusing enough to cause subtle errors. For the vast majority of programming, it is worth a spending a little run time to avoid a lot of debugging time.
The active code below uses the fill-in version of the addTime
function.
Feel free to modify the code!
- Time& t1
- Try again.
- Time& t2
- Try again.
- Time& sum
- Correct!
Q-2: Which parameter is not declared as a const
?
void addTimeFill (const Time& t1, const Time& t2, Time& sum) {
sum.hour = t1.hour + t2.hour;
sum.minute = t1.minute + t2.minute;
sum.second = t1.second + t2.second;
if (sum.second >= 60.0) {
sum.second -= 60.0;
sum.minute += 1;
}
if (sum.minute >= 60) {
sum.minute -= 60;
sum.hour += 1;
}
}