As you see in pp. 638-640, structures are useful to store related data together that defined with different types. Here you are asked to modify the Payroll program that we have been working on previous labs. You are asked to write a program using structures and pointers as shown in the following, and store the in an output file. You may see "Appending a Node to the List" in pp. 1126-1128, and pp. 530-536. #include using namespace std; struct Employee_t { string Fname, Lname; int NofHours; float Hourly Rate; char Major (Computer, Security); float Amount; Employee *next }; Employee *head; void print-record (struct *); //use setw() to align fields properly; First Name Komp Scien Last Name ESU CPSC Your Name Add 7 more of your own here... Create a file, Employee.txt. int main() { # of Hours 30 } 40 40 for (int count = 0; count < NumOfEmp; count++) { print each line on your screen; //Allocate a new node and store. infile >> newNode->fname; infile >> newNode->NofHours; newNode-> = nullptr; print-record(newNode); return 0; Hourly Rate 40 30 35 Amount Comp Sci Y Y Y 2200 2200 3400 Comp Sec N N Y
As you see in pp. 638-640, structures are useful to store related data together that defined with different types. Here you are asked to modify the Payroll program that we have been working on previous labs. You are asked to write a program using structures and pointers as shown in the following, and store the in an output file. You may see "Appending a Node to the List" in pp. 1126-1128, and pp. 530-536. #include using namespace std; struct Employee_t { string Fname, Lname; int NofHours; float Hourly Rate; char Major (Computer, Security); float Amount; Employee *next }; Employee *head; void print-record (struct *); //use setw() to align fields properly; First Name Komp Scien Last Name ESU CPSC Your Name Add 7 more of your own here... Create a file, Employee.txt. int main() { # of Hours 30 } 40 40 for (int count = 0; count < NumOfEmp; count++) { print each line on your screen; //Allocate a new node and store. infile >> newNode->fname; infile >> newNode->NofHours; newNode-> = nullptr; print-record(newNode); return 0; Hourly Rate 40 30 35 Amount Comp Sci Y Y Y 2200 2200 3400 Comp Sec N N Y
Database System Concepts
7th Edition
ISBN:9780078022159
Author:Abraham Silberschatz Professor, Henry F. Korth, S. Sudarshan
Publisher:Abraham Silberschatz Professor, Henry F. Korth, S. Sudarshan
Chapter1: Introduction
Section: Chapter Questions
Problem 1PE
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Recommended to use the following to read/print 10 lines;
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One last implementation, can you have the user implement their own names and employee info (like first and last name, # of hours worked, hourly rate, and their major) and it computes it for them and prints it out?
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Can you make it so it computes the amount (# of hours x hourly rate) and not put the amount In the txt?
Also if the employee is a computer sci or a cyber sec major then add 1000 and if they are both add 2000 to their amount.
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