TCES 203 Assignment 4 – Classes

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This assignment tests your understanding of concepts covered in the course dealing with
classes. Redo the previous homework solution to use a Class instead of a structure.
Define a Student class with a full name, hobby and student id. A student id is a 5-digit
integer. The class should provide the following public functions:
• A default constructor, copy constructor and an overloaded constructor that takes
all three parameters.
• A function to display the information.
• Mutator functions that allow us to modify the contents of a student. Only name
and hobby can be modified.
• Accessor functions that allow us to get the individual pieces of information – id,
hobby or full name.
In main function, create and populate an array of student objects dynamically. All
user input must be from the main function. Use constructors to pass the information
and the corresponding functions to test all the member functions. Use C++ memory
allocation operators, new and the corresponding delete to release memory. Use
valgrind to check for leaks. Use a header file for the definition and a corresponding
.cpp file for the implementation.
Submission and Grading:
Submit Student.h, Student.cpp and main.cpp under the Assignments section of the course
web page as one zip file with the name Student.zip (Both last names in the
case of pairs, exclude the <>).
There will be points taken off for not following the conventions listed in this document
regarding submissions, outputs and naming conventions.
You are required to properly indent your code and will lose points if you make significant
indentation mistakes. See the textbook for an explanation and examples of proper
indentation.
Give meaningful names to functions and variables in your code. Localize variables
whenever possible — that is, declare them in the smallest scope in which they are needed.
Include a comment at the beginning of your program with basic information and a
description of the program and include a comment at the start of each function. Your
comments should be written in your own words and not taken directly from this
document. Write comments within functions to explain the flow or any obscure code.
Provide comments for the functions as well as for the class definition. Make sure that
every file has a header comment including the .h and the main.cpp files.
You should include a comment at the beginning of your program with some basic
information and a description of the program, as in:
// Menaka Abraham
// 3/30/15
// 203
// Assignment #1
//
// This program will…