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  • JKSHJ JKSH

    @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

    And now when I try to compile my "Hello World" project, I get this error.

    The error says that your compiler is too old and it doesn't support the C++ 2011 standard. But I'm confused: If you're doing a basic C++ Hello World program, why is Code::Blocks trying to include Qt?

    I suggest you leave Qt out for now. Just focus on learning plain C++. This way, it doesn't matter if you have an old compiler.

    A Offline
    A Offline
    Annabelle
    wrote on last edited by
    #301

    @JKSH said in Qt Programming Language:

    @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

    And now when I try to compile my "Hello World" project, I get this error.

    The error says that your compiler is too old and it doesn't support the C++ 2011 standard. But I'm confused: If you're doing a basic C++ Hello World program, why is Code::Blocks trying to include Qt?

    I suggest you leave Qt out for now. Just focus on learning plain C++. This way, it doesn't matter if you have an old compiler.

    Now when I compile a project, with regular C++ code, here's what I got in return.

    0_1563905512388_14fc52e1-5a2f-4ad6-9bde-9e719908888d-image.png

    JonBJ JKSHJ 2 Replies Last reply
    0
    • A Annabelle

      @JKSH said in Qt Programming Language:

      @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

      And now when I try to compile my "Hello World" project, I get this error.

      The error says that your compiler is too old and it doesn't support the C++ 2011 standard. But I'm confused: If you're doing a basic C++ Hello World program, why is Code::Blocks trying to include Qt?

      I suggest you leave Qt out for now. Just focus on learning plain C++. This way, it doesn't matter if you have an old compiler.

      Now when I compile a project, with regular C++ code, here's what I got in return.

      0_1563905512388_14fc52e1-5a2f-4ad6-9bde-9e719908888d-image.png

      JonBJ Offline
      JonBJ Offline
      JonB
      wrote on last edited by JonB
      #302

      @Annabelle
      It looks like you have progressed! It seems to be successfully rubnning your gcc compiler.

      You should open up your Sources folder in the left-hand pane so that we can see what file(s) you have. And perhaps open your main/only .cpp source file into the right-hand pane so that we can see that too.

      The error message indicates that some .cpp source file has an "odd" character in it, on line #9. The sort of stray character that perhaps got in there from a mis-typing.

      1 Reply Last reply
      3
      • A Annabelle

        @JKSH said in Qt Programming Language:

        @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

        And now when I try to compile my "Hello World" project, I get this error.

        The error says that your compiler is too old and it doesn't support the C++ 2011 standard. But I'm confused: If you're doing a basic C++ Hello World program, why is Code::Blocks trying to include Qt?

        I suggest you leave Qt out for now. Just focus on learning plain C++. This way, it doesn't matter if you have an old compiler.

        Now when I compile a project, with regular C++ code, here's what I got in return.

        0_1563905512388_14fc52e1-5a2f-4ad6-9bde-9e719908888d-image.png

        JKSHJ Offline
        JKSHJ Offline
        JKSH
        Moderators
        wrote on last edited by
        #303

        @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

        Now when I compile a project, with regular C++ code, here's what I got in return.

        The error message is "stray '\240' in program". This means your .cpp file contains a character that the compiler does not accept.

        '\240' is a specially-formatted character that represents a space. It can appear when someone copies code from a website or a program like Microsoft Word, and then pastes it into their IDE.

        Your compiler says that the error is in line 9. I suggest you completely erase lines 8 to 10 to get rid of the '\240' character, and then re-type those lines by hand.

        Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

        A 1 Reply Last reply
        4
        • JKSHJ JKSH

          @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

          Now when I compile a project, with regular C++ code, here's what I got in return.

          The error message is "stray '\240' in program". This means your .cpp file contains a character that the compiler does not accept.

          '\240' is a specially-formatted character that represents a space. It can appear when someone copies code from a website or a program like Microsoft Word, and then pastes it into their IDE.

          Your compiler says that the error is in line 9. I suggest you completely erase lines 8 to 10 to get rid of the '\240' character, and then re-type those lines by hand.

          A Offline
          A Offline
          Annabelle
          wrote on last edited by
          #304

          @JKSH said in Qt Programming Language:

          @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

          Now when I compile a project, with regular C++ code, here's what I got in return.

          The error message is "stray '\240' in program". This means your .cpp file contains a character that the compiler does not accept.

          '\240' is a specially-formatted character that represents a space. It can appear when someone copies code from a website or a program like Microsoft Word, and then pastes it into their IDE.

          Your compiler says that the error is in line 9. I suggest you completely erase lines 8 to 10 to get rid of the '\240' character, and then re-type those lines by hand.

          What's the \240 character? I'm confused on that one!

          JKSHJ 1 Reply Last reply
          0
          • A Annabelle

            @JKSH said in Qt Programming Language:

            @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

            Now when I compile a project, with regular C++ code, here's what I got in return.

            The error message is "stray '\240' in program". This means your .cpp file contains a character that the compiler does not accept.

            '\240' is a specially-formatted character that represents a space. It can appear when someone copies code from a website or a program like Microsoft Word, and then pastes it into their IDE.

            Your compiler says that the error is in line 9. I suggest you completely erase lines 8 to 10 to get rid of the '\240' character, and then re-type those lines by hand.

            What's the \240 character? I'm confused on that one!

            JKSHJ Offline
            JKSHJ Offline
            JKSH
            Moderators
            wrote on last edited by JKSH
            #305

            @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

            What's the \240 character? I'm confused on that one!

            As I mentioned before, it is a specially-formatted character that represents a space.

            There are many ways to represent text: Sighted people draw lines to represent a character, Braille users arrange dot patterns to represent a character, while computers use a number to represent a character. For example, computers represent 'A' as the number 65, 'B' as the number 66, and so on.

            In computers, there are multiple ways to represent a space. \240 is one such representation. Unfortunately, this representation causes problems for your compiler when it is pasted into your IDE.

            Since it is a space character, I doubt that your screenreader will read it out. Sighted people can't see the bad character on the screen either.

            The easiest thing to do is to erase the offending line from your code and re-type the whole line by hand.

            Qt Doc Search for browsers: forum.qt.io/topic/35616/web-browser-extension-for-improved-doc-searches

            A 1 Reply Last reply
            4
            • JKSHJ JKSH

              @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

              What's the \240 character? I'm confused on that one!

              As I mentioned before, it is a specially-formatted character that represents a space.

              There are many ways to represent text: Sighted people draw lines to represent a character, Braille users arrange dot patterns to represent a character, while computers use a number to represent a character. For example, computers represent 'A' as the number 65, 'B' as the number 66, and so on.

              In computers, there are multiple ways to represent a space. \240 is one such representation. Unfortunately, this representation causes problems for your compiler when it is pasted into your IDE.

              Since it is a space character, I doubt that your screenreader will read it out. Sighted people can't see the bad character on the screen either.

              The easiest thing to do is to erase the offending line from your code and re-type the whole line by hand.

              A Offline
              A Offline
              Annabelle
              wrote on last edited by
              #306

              @JKSH said in Qt Programming Language:

              @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

              What's the \240 character? I'm confused on that one!

              As I mentioned before, it is a specially-formatted character that represents a space.

              There are many ways to represent text: Sighted people draw lines to represent a character, Braille users arrange dot patterns to represent a character, while computers use a number to represent a character. For example, computers represent 'A' as the number 65, 'B' as the number 66, and so on.

              In computers, there are multiple ways to represent a space. \240 is one such representation. Unfortunately, this representation causes problems for your compiler when it is pasted into your IDE.

              Since it is a space character, I doubt that your screenreader will read it out. Sighted people can't see the bad character on the screen either.

              The easiest thing to do is to erase the offending line from your code and re-type the whole line by hand.

              I typed the offending line by hand, and here's what I got.
              0_1563966708194_ba140787-381a-4ed3-9668-989f1535714a-image.png

              jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
              2
              • A Annabelle

                @JKSH said in Qt Programming Language:

                @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

                What's the \240 character? I'm confused on that one!

                As I mentioned before, it is a specially-formatted character that represents a space.

                There are many ways to represent text: Sighted people draw lines to represent a character, Braille users arrange dot patterns to represent a character, while computers use a number to represent a character. For example, computers represent 'A' as the number 65, 'B' as the number 66, and so on.

                In computers, there are multiple ways to represent a space. \240 is one such representation. Unfortunately, this representation causes problems for your compiler when it is pasted into your IDE.

                Since it is a space character, I doubt that your screenreader will read it out. Sighted people can't see the bad character on the screen either.

                The easiest thing to do is to erase the offending line from your code and re-type the whole line by hand.

                I typed the offending line by hand, and here's what I got.
                0_1563966708194_ba140787-381a-4ed3-9668-989f1535714a-image.png

                jsulmJ Offline
                jsulmJ Offline
                jsulm
                Lifetime Qt Champion
                wrote on last edited by
                #307

                @Annabelle Looks good, it works

                https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                A 1 Reply Last reply
                2
                • ODБOïO Offline
                  ODБOïO Offline
                  ODБOï
                  wrote on last edited by ODБOï
                  #308

                  @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

                  not sure Qt is a Programming Language, maybe this was already discussed, hard to know when topic has 300+ posts...
                  It looks like the OP never created a new thread and asked all his questions in the same one.

                  mrjjM 1 Reply Last reply
                  0
                  • ODБOïO ODБOï

                    @Annabelle said in Qt Programming Language:

                    not sure Qt is a Programming Language, maybe this was already discussed, hard to know when topic has 300+ posts...
                    It looks like the OP never created a new thread and asked all his questions in the same one.

                    mrjjM Offline
                    mrjjM Offline
                    mrjj
                    Lifetime Qt Champion
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #309

                    @LeLev
                    Hi
                    She is using a screen reader so I think its easier for her to use the same thread.

                    ODБOïO 1 Reply Last reply
                    2
                    • mrjjM mrjj

                      @LeLev
                      Hi
                      She is using a screen reader so I think its easier for her to use the same thread.

                      ODБOïO Offline
                      ODБOïO Offline
                      ODБOï
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #310

                      @mrjj ah ok! my bad

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      1
                      • jsulmJ jsulm

                        @Annabelle Looks good, it works

                        A Offline
                        A Offline
                        Annabelle
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #311

                        @jsulm said in Qt Programming Language:

                        @Annabelle Looks good, it works

                        Cool-ee-o! So what do I do next?

                        aha_1980A 1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • A Annabelle

                          @jsulm said in Qt Programming Language:

                          @Annabelle Looks good, it works

                          Cool-ee-o! So what do I do next?

                          aha_1980A Offline
                          aha_1980A Offline
                          aha_1980
                          Lifetime Qt Champion
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #312

                          @Annabelle: Congrats, your program is compiling and running.

                          However, it does not seem to output any useful yet.

                          So the next thing would be to actually make your program to output "Hello World!" (or any other greeting you can think of).

                          Good luck!

                          Qt has to stay free or it will die.

                          A 1 Reply Last reply
                          2
                          • aha_1980A aha_1980

                            @Annabelle: Congrats, your program is compiling and running.

                            However, it does not seem to output any useful yet.

                            So the next thing would be to actually make your program to output "Hello World!" (or any other greeting you can think of).

                            Good luck!

                            A Offline
                            A Offline
                            Annabelle
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #313

                            @aha_1980 said in Qt Programming Language:

                            @Annabelle: Congrats, your program is compiling and running.

                            However, it does not seem to output any useful yet.

                            So the next thing would be to actually make your program to output "Hello World!" (or any other greeting you can think of).

                            Good luck!

                            Isn't that what the line, "std::cout << "Hello, World!"; is supposed to do? I'm confused!

                            aha_1980A JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
                            0
                            • A Annabelle

                              @aha_1980 said in Qt Programming Language:

                              @Annabelle: Congrats, your program is compiling and running.

                              However, it does not seem to output any useful yet.

                              So the next thing would be to actually make your program to output "Hello World!" (or any other greeting you can think of).

                              Good luck!

                              Isn't that what the line, "std::cout << "Hello, World!"; is supposed to do? I'm confused!

                              aha_1980A Offline
                              aha_1980A Offline
                              aha_1980
                              Lifetime Qt Champion
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #314

                              Hi @Annabelle,

                              Isn't that what the line, "std::cout << "Hello, World!"; is supposed to do? I'm confused!

                              Yes, it is. Do you have this output somewhere on your screen? In the screenshots you provided, I didn't see it.

                              If you already have that, then the next steps could be:

                              1. Print "Hello World" ten times, with an upcounting number appended, like:
                              Hello World 1
                              Hello World 2
                              Hello World 3
                              ...
                              Hello World 10
                              
                              1. Ask the user for his name, and greet him. That could look like this:
                              Hello, what's your name?
                              Luke
                              Nice to meet you, Luke!
                              

                              That would then almost be a complete program, taking an input and providing an output. Only the data processing is missing - but we can add that later.

                              Regards

                              Qt has to stay free or it will die.

                              1 Reply Last reply
                              2
                              • A Annabelle

                                @aha_1980 said in Qt Programming Language:

                                @Annabelle: Congrats, your program is compiling and running.

                                However, it does not seem to output any useful yet.

                                So the next thing would be to actually make your program to output "Hello World!" (or any other greeting you can think of).

                                Good luck!

                                Isn't that what the line, "std::cout << "Hello, World!"; is supposed to do? I'm confused!

                                JonBJ Offline
                                JonBJ Offline
                                JonB
                                wrote on last edited by JonB
                                #315

                                @Annabelle
                                Hi Annabelle.

                                Isn't that what the line, "std::cout << "Hello, World!"; is supposed to do? I'm confused!

                                As I mentioned earlier, we cannot see your source code in the screenshots. You need to open your source file so that we at least can see its contents.

                                If you were currently editing your .cpp file's content, I assume you have to have it open, e.g. so your screen reader can read its content. Can you get to that state and post screenshot?

                                A 2 Replies Last reply
                                1
                                • JonBJ JonB

                                  @Annabelle
                                  Hi Annabelle.

                                  Isn't that what the line, "std::cout << "Hello, World!"; is supposed to do? I'm confused!

                                  As I mentioned earlier, we cannot see your source code in the screenshots. You need to open your source file so that we at least can see its contents.

                                  If you were currently editing your .cpp file's content, I assume you have to have it open, e.g. so your screen reader can read its content. Can you get to that state and post screenshot?

                                  A Offline
                                  A Offline
                                  Annabelle
                                  wrote on last edited by
                                  #316

                                  @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                  @Annabelle
                                  Hi Annabelle.

                                  Isn't that what the line, "std::cout << "Hello, World!"; is supposed to do? I'm confused!

                                  As I mentioned earlier, we cannot see your source code in the screenshots. You need to open your source file so that we at least can see its contents.

                                  If you were currently editing your .cpp file's content, I assume you have to have it open, e.g. so your screen reader can read its content. Can you get to that state and post screenshot?

                                  How's this?
                                  0_1564026008478_a78a4405-c20a-4616-b15e-09d67a7e7238-image.png

                                  1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • JonBJ JonB

                                    @Annabelle
                                    Hi Annabelle.

                                    Isn't that what the line, "std::cout << "Hello, World!"; is supposed to do? I'm confused!

                                    As I mentioned earlier, we cannot see your source code in the screenshots. You need to open your source file so that we at least can see its contents.

                                    If you were currently editing your .cpp file's content, I assume you have to have it open, e.g. so your screen reader can read its content. Can you get to that state and post screenshot?

                                    A Offline
                                    A Offline
                                    Annabelle
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #317

                                    @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                    @Annabelle
                                    Hi Annabelle.

                                    Isn't that what the line, "std::cout << "Hello, World!"; is supposed to do? I'm confused!

                                    As I mentioned earlier, we cannot see your source code in the screenshots. You need to open your source file so that we at least can see its contents.

                                    If you were currently editing your .cpp file's content, I assume you have to have it open, e.g. so your screen reader can read its content. Can you get to that state and post screenshot?

                                    How about this one.
                                    0_1564026313636_ece6e8dd-5eed-4e06-92f8-909491c8ad37-image.png

                                    aha_1980A JonBJ 2 Replies Last reply
                                    0
                                    • A Annabelle

                                      @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                      @Annabelle
                                      Hi Annabelle.

                                      Isn't that what the line, "std::cout << "Hello, World!"; is supposed to do? I'm confused!

                                      As I mentioned earlier, we cannot see your source code in the screenshots. You need to open your source file so that we at least can see its contents.

                                      If you were currently editing your .cpp file's content, I assume you have to have it open, e.g. so your screen reader can read its content. Can you get to that state and post screenshot?

                                      How about this one.
                                      0_1564026313636_ece6e8dd-5eed-4e06-92f8-909491c8ad37-image.png

                                      aha_1980A Offline
                                      aha_1980A Offline
                                      aha_1980
                                      Lifetime Qt Champion
                                      wrote on last edited by
                                      #318

                                      Hi @Annabelle,

                                      Ok, that shows us your current main function. So far so good!

                                      What you did there, is called hardcoding. That means, your program does greet you, but it can only great you and no one else.

                                      Before we proceed I have an important question. When you run your program, do you get the greeting output on some window? That is an important point, because that's why we do all this programming, right?

                                      And once that is working the task is really, to not only greet Annabelle, but also Vladimir, Julia, Rodriguez, and Sabrina, ...

                                      To do this, you will need to get some input into your program, and store the input for further processing.

                                      Regards

                                      Qt has to stay free or it will die.

                                      1 Reply Last reply
                                      1
                                      • A Annabelle

                                        @JonB said in Qt Programming Language:

                                        @Annabelle
                                        Hi Annabelle.

                                        Isn't that what the line, "std::cout << "Hello, World!"; is supposed to do? I'm confused!

                                        As I mentioned earlier, we cannot see your source code in the screenshots. You need to open your source file so that we at least can see its contents.

                                        If you were currently editing your .cpp file's content, I assume you have to have it open, e.g. so your screen reader can read its content. Can you get to that state and post screenshot?

                                        How about this one.
                                        0_1564026313636_ece6e8dd-5eed-4e06-92f8-909491c8ad37-image.png

                                        JonBJ Offline
                                        JonBJ Offline
                                        JonB
                                        wrote on last edited by JonB
                                        #319

                                        @Annabelle
                                        Hi Annabelle,

                                        Yep, the latest screenshot allows us to see your code! You'll want to show us that when you have a question about your code. (At a later date if the code gets too long to show in that screen we'll have to do something else, but that can wait for now.)

                                        A couple of points:

                                        1. Earlier you had a compilation error, about a funny character in the code, at line #9, I believe. It seems to be compiling now, I think, so you may have dealt with that. But your lines 9, 10 and 11 are just an open-curly-brace, a blank line, and then a close-curly-brace. These do nothing, and are not useful in your code. Delete lines 9 to 11 inclusive, or replace them with a single blank line which looks nice to us (a gap between the #include line and the start of your main() function), but you may not be fussed about blank lines/layout.

                                        2. As @aha_1980 has written, your program produces some lines of output sent to what is called "stdout" via your std::cout lines. This should produce some output somewhere (which can presumably be read to you), but we cannot see where that might be. The development environment you are using, known as an "IDE", is in charge of where that goes.

                                        What we can see is that the "Build log" tab you are displaying, which shows the results of compiling, does not seem to include this output. Maybe there is a different tab at the bottom, scrolled off to the right, which has some sort of "Output" pane to send to? Or --- and it gets confusing now, I am only guessing --- the "Build log" seems to be showing that when your IDE runs your "Hello World" program it does it by passing it to an internal CodeBlocks or CodeRunner program named cb_console_runner.exe. Note the use of "console" there. It may be that opens up a "console" (like an output window) when it runs to display your program's output, and that might automatically go away when your program ends, I don't know.

                                        EDIT I think I now understand your IDE is Code::Blocks (not CodeRunner). I have done some brief Googling, which you may want to do, for CodeBlocks stdout. There are indeed various hits about "how do I get to see the output from my program from CodeBlocks".

                                        If we take, say, https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28878911/how-can-i-get-console-output-in-code-block-ide, the guy there has a similar program to yours. One thing we are told is

                                        Click on build->run or hit Ctrl+F10 and a new CMD Window should pop up, showing you your "Hello world!".

                                        So that tells us it does indeed need to open a separate command/output window to send the output to. Does your screenreader tell you this window gets opened or read its content?

                                        Then the last response there says:

                                        Please include getchar() in the function before return statement. This happens because the computer is executing your program and doesn't wait for you to see the output. Including getchar(), at the end mandates it to wait for an input & in the meanwhile you can observe your output

                                        I did wonder if this might be the case. Because your program outputs some lines and then simply terminates, it may well be that this console output window pops up when you run your program, shows the lines, and then immediately exits. So you/your screenreader may know nothing about it. You need to cause the program to "pause" before it exists so you can examine this output window.

                                        I'm not a C++ expert, but I believe you should try inserting the following two lines after all your std::cout lines and immediately before your return 0; line:

                                        std::string input;
                                        std::getline(std::cin, input);
                                        

                                        If you do that, when you run your program I believe/hope it will not immediately run to exit as it does now. You will have to "find" that new output window and click the Enter key in it before it exits and then your program completes. Hopefully you can then get your screenreader to read it out before you press the key?

                                        A 1 Reply Last reply
                                        4
                                        • JonBJ JonB

                                          @Annabelle
                                          Hi Annabelle,

                                          Yep, the latest screenshot allows us to see your code! You'll want to show us that when you have a question about your code. (At a later date if the code gets too long to show in that screen we'll have to do something else, but that can wait for now.)

                                          A couple of points:

                                          1. Earlier you had a compilation error, about a funny character in the code, at line #9, I believe. It seems to be compiling now, I think, so you may have dealt with that. But your lines 9, 10 and 11 are just an open-curly-brace, a blank line, and then a close-curly-brace. These do nothing, and are not useful in your code. Delete lines 9 to 11 inclusive, or replace them with a single blank line which looks nice to us (a gap between the #include line and the start of your main() function), but you may not be fussed about blank lines/layout.

                                          2. As @aha_1980 has written, your program produces some lines of output sent to what is called "stdout" via your std::cout lines. This should produce some output somewhere (which can presumably be read to you), but we cannot see where that might be. The development environment you are using, known as an "IDE", is in charge of where that goes.

                                          What we can see is that the "Build log" tab you are displaying, which shows the results of compiling, does not seem to include this output. Maybe there is a different tab at the bottom, scrolled off to the right, which has some sort of "Output" pane to send to? Or --- and it gets confusing now, I am only guessing --- the "Build log" seems to be showing that when your IDE runs your "Hello World" program it does it by passing it to an internal CodeBlocks or CodeRunner program named cb_console_runner.exe. Note the use of "console" there. It may be that opens up a "console" (like an output window) when it runs to display your program's output, and that might automatically go away when your program ends, I don't know.

                                          EDIT I think I now understand your IDE is Code::Blocks (not CodeRunner). I have done some brief Googling, which you may want to do, for CodeBlocks stdout. There are indeed various hits about "how do I get to see the output from my program from CodeBlocks".

                                          If we take, say, https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28878911/how-can-i-get-console-output-in-code-block-ide, the guy there has a similar program to yours. One thing we are told is

                                          Click on build->run or hit Ctrl+F10 and a new CMD Window should pop up, showing you your "Hello world!".

                                          So that tells us it does indeed need to open a separate command/output window to send the output to. Does your screenreader tell you this window gets opened or read its content?

                                          Then the last response there says:

                                          Please include getchar() in the function before return statement. This happens because the computer is executing your program and doesn't wait for you to see the output. Including getchar(), at the end mandates it to wait for an input & in the meanwhile you can observe your output

                                          I did wonder if this might be the case. Because your program outputs some lines and then simply terminates, it may well be that this console output window pops up when you run your program, shows the lines, and then immediately exits. So you/your screenreader may know nothing about it. You need to cause the program to "pause" before it exists so you can examine this output window.

                                          I'm not a C++ expert, but I believe you should try inserting the following two lines after all your std::cout lines and immediately before your return 0; line:

                                          std::string input;
                                          std::getline(std::cin, input);
                                          

                                          If you do that, when you run your program I believe/hope it will not immediately run to exit as it does now. You will have to "find" that new output window and click the Enter key in it before it exits and then your program completes. Hopefully you can then get your screenreader to read it out before you press the key?

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                                          Annabelle
                                          wrote on last edited by
                                          #320

                                          @jonb said in Qt Programming Language:

                                          @Annabelle
                                          Hi Annabelle,

                                          Yep, the latest screenshot allows us to see your code! You'll want to show us that when you have a question about your code. (At a later date if the code gets too long to show in that screen we'll have to do something else, but that can wait for now.)

                                          A couple of points:

                                          1. Earlier you had a compilation error, about a funny character in the code, at line #9, I believe. It seems to be compiling now, I think, so you may have dealt with that. But your lines 9, 10 and 11 are just an open-curly-brace, a blank line, and then a close-curly-brace. These do nothing, and are not useful in your code. Delete lines 9 to 11 inclusive, or replace them with a single blank line which looks nice to us (a gap between the #include line and the start of your main() function), but you may not be fussed about blank lines/layout.

                                          2. As @aha_1980 has written, your program produces some lines of output sent to what is called "stdout" via your std::cout lines. This should produce some output somewhere (which can presumably be read to you), but we cannot see where that might be. The development environment you are using, known as an "IDE", is in charge of where that goes.

                                          What we can see is that the "Build log" tab you are displaying, which shows the results of compiling, does not seem to include this output. Maybe there is a different tab at the bottom, scrolled off to the right, which has some sort of "Output" pane to send to? Or --- and it gets confusing now, I am only guessing --- the "Build log" seems to be showing that when your IDE runs your "Hello World" program it does it by passing it to an internal CodeBlocks or CodeRunner program named cb_console_runner.exe. Note the use of "console" there. It may be that opens up a "console" (like an output window) when it runs to display your program's output, and that might automatically go away when your program ends, I don't know.

                                          EDIT I think I now understand your IDE is Code::Blocks (not CodeRunner). I have done some brief Googling, which you may want to do, for CodeBlocks stdout. There are indeed various hits about "how do I get to see the output from my program from CodeBlocks".

                                          If we take, say, https://stackoverflow.com/questions/28878911/how-can-i-get-console-output-in-code-block-ide, the guy there has a similar program to yours. One thing we are told is

                                          Click on build->run or hit Ctrl+F10 and a new CMD Window should pop up, showing you your "Hello world!".

                                          So that tells us it does indeed need to open a separate command/output window to send the output to. Does your screenreader tell you this window gets opened or read its content?

                                          Then the last response there says:

                                          Please include getchar() in the function before return statement. This happens because the computer is executing your program and doesn't wait for you to see the output. Including getchar(), at the end mandates it to wait for an input & in the meanwhile you can observe your output

                                          I did wonder if this might be the case. Because your program outputs some lines and then simply terminates, it may well be that this console output window pops up when you run your program, shows the lines, and then immediately exits. So you/your screenreader may know nothing about it. You need to cause the program to "pause" before it exists so you can examine this output window.

                                          I'm not a C++ expert, but I believe you should try inserting the following two lines after all your std::cout lines and immediately before your return 0; line:

                                          std::string input;
                                          std::getline(std::cin, input);
                                          

                                          If you do that, when you run your program I believe/hope it will not immediately run to exit as it does now. You will have to "find" that new output window and click the Enter key in it before it exits and then your program completes. Hopefully you can then get your screenreader to read it out before you press the key?

                                          Here's a screenshot of what my project looks like now.
                                          0_1564177921376_fab80b48-d5dd-4d3a-b0f7-08a520e8af57-image.png
                                          And here's a screenshot of the code.
                                          0_1564177954379_79727094-32ac-4da2-a426-6e8d36889568-image.png

                                          JonBJ aha_1980A 2 Replies Last reply
                                          2

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