- arrow operator and dot operator class pointer

0 votes

In C++, we know that given a class pointer, we use the (->) arrow operator to access the members of that class, as seen here:

#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

class myclass{
    private:
        int a,b;
    public:
        void setdata(int i,int j){
            a=i;
            b=j;
        }
};

int main() {
    myclass *p;
    p = new myclass;
    p->setdata(5,6);
    return 0;
}

Then I create an array of myclass.

p=new myclass[10];

when I go to access myclass members through (->) arrow operator, I get the following error:

base operand of '->' has non-pointer type 'myclass'

However, when I access class members using the (.) operator, it works. 

These are the things that perplex me. Why do I have to use the (.) operator for a class array?

Aug 11, 2022 in C++ by Nicholas
• 7,760 points
597 views

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