Difference between revisions of "Variable"
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− | Variables are like little boxes to store data in, typically numbers. What's in the box?! | + | Variables are like little boxes to store data in and read data from, typically numbers. What's in the box?! |
== How to Declare a Variable == | == How to Declare a Variable == |
Revision as of 20:24, 6 August 2016
Variables are like little boxes to store data in and read data from, typically numbers. What's in the box?!
Contents
How to Declare a Variable
You declare/create a variable by stating its type and then stating its name: int myVar;
. You can also give an initial value for the variable during creation using the assignment operator: int myVar = 69;
.
Variable Names
Variables names (the same as any other type of user-defined symbol) can contain any number, letter, and the underscore character. They cannot start with a number. Case matters (_DirtayBoi69
is not the same symbol as _dirtayboi69
).
Variable Types
int
int
variables store an integer (non-fractional number) ranging from -2147483648 to 2147483647. They occupy 4 bytes of memory.
The const Specifier
You can specify that a variable's value cannot be changed by declaring it like this: const int blazeItFgt = 420;
. Doing so can protect your code from unintentional bugs and is generally considered a fucking good practice called 'const correctness'. Note that when you declare a variable as const
, you need to initialize it during creation because you cannot assign to it afterwards.