2 Dimensionales char* initalisieren?
-
Kriegs nicht hin bekomme immer einen Fehler, wie ist die richtige Schreibweise:
hab auch schon char* sBitrateData[][] = {...} versucht
char sBitrateData[][][] = { {"999","999","999","999","999","999"}, {"032","032","032","032","008","008"}, {"064","048","040","048","016","016"}, {"096","056","048","056","024","024"}, {"128","064","056","064","032","032"}, {"160","080","064","080","040","040"}, {"192","096","080","096","048","048"}, {"224","112","096","112","056","056"}, {"256","128","112","128","064","064"}, {"288","160","128","144","080","080"}, {"320","192","160","160","096","096"}, {"352","224","192","176","112","112"}, {"384","256","224","192","128","128"}, {"416","320","256","224","144","144"}, {"448","384","320","256","160","160"}, {"999","999","999","999","999","999"}};
-
const char * sBitrateData[][6] = { {"999","999","999","999","999","999"}, // ... };
Du mußt immer die maximale Dimension der nicht-äußersten Dimensionen angeben.
"const" habe ich angegeben, weil du sicherlich die String-Inhalte nicht mehr verändern willst.P.S: Die Größe des Arrays bekommst du dann nachträglich folgendermaßen heraus:
const int nBitrateDataCount = sizeof(sBitrateData) / sizeof(sBitrateData[0]);
-
Danke für die Antwort.
Es funktioniert. Aber wieso erkennt er die größe nicht an meinen geschweiften Klammern?