void SetAt( int nIndex, CObject* newElement );
Parameters
nIndex
An integer index that is greater than or equal to 0 and less than or equal to the value returned by GetUpperBound.
newElement
The object pointer to be inserted in this array. A NULL value is allowed.
Remarks
Sets the array element at the specified index. SetAt will not cause the array to grow. Use SetAtGrow if you want the array to grow automatically.
You must ensure that your index value represents a valid position in the array. If it is out of bounds, then the Debug version of the library asserts.
The following table shows other member functions that are similar to CObArray::SetAt.
Class | Member Function |
CByteArray | void SetAt( int nIndex, BYTE newElement ); |
CDWordArray | void SetAt( int nIndex, DWORD newElement ); |
CPtrArray | void SetAt( int nIndex, void* newElement ); |
CStringArray | void SetAt( int nIndex, LPCTSTR newElement ); |
CUIntArray | void SetAt( int nIndex, UINT newElement ); |
CWordArray | void SetAt( int nIndex, WORD newElement ); |
Example
See CObList::CObList for a listing of the CAge
class used in all collection examples.
// example for CObArray::SetAt
CObArray array;
CObject* pa;
array.Add( new CAge( 21 ) ); // Element 0
array.Add( new CAge( 40 ) ); // Element 1
if( ( pa = array.GetAt( 0 ) ) != NULL )
{
array.SetAt( 0, new CAge( 30 ) ); // Replace element 0.
delete pa; // Delete the original element at 0.
}
#ifdef _DEBUG
afxDump.SetDepth( 1 );
afxDump << "SetAt example: " << &array << "\n";
#endif
The results from this program are as follows:
SetAt example: A CObArray with 2 elements
[0] = a CAge at $47E0 30
[1] = a CAge at $47A0 40
CObArray Overview | Class Members | Hierarchy Chart
See Also CObArray::GetAt, CObArray::SetAtGrow, CObArray::ElementAt, CObArray::operator []