You will be writing a program for a local bank that allows them to create objects repres account. Create the following two classes: • Transaction: a class representing a customer's single transaction at the bank: • Member Variables: · amount: An int representing how much the transaction was for. • isWithdrawal: A bool: true if the transaction was a withdrawal and false if it • Member Functions
OOPs
In today's technology-driven world, computer programming skills are in high demand. The object-oriented programming (OOP) approach is very much useful while designing and maintaining software programs. Object-oriented programming (OOP) is a basic programming paradigm that almost every developer has used at some stage in their career.
Constructor
The easiest way to think of a constructor in object-oriented programming (OOP) languages is:
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C++ Question
Hello, Please create the correct code based on the attached requirement picture. Please make sure the code is functional. Please do not use any Advanced C++ syntax. Please make sure to submit the codes for Transaction.cpp, Transaction.h, Source.cpp, Account.cpp, and Account.h Thank you.
![You will be writing a program for a local bank that allows them to create objects representing a customer's bank
account. Create the following two classes:
• Transaction: a class representing a customer's single transaction at the bank:
• Member Variables:
· amount: An int representing how much the transaction was for.
- isWithdrawal: A bool: true if the transaction was a withdrawal and false if it was a deposit.
• Member Functions
· Constructor: Requires the client to pass values for both member variables.
- print: Prints this transaction. For example, "Withdrawal: -$5" or "Deposit: +$15"
Account: a class representing a customer's bank account:
• Member Variables:
· balance: Represents how much money is in the account.
• transactions: A vector of pointers to Transaction objects. When the user makes a deposit or withdrawal, a
Transaction object will be create and a pointer to it will be added to this vector.
• Member Functions:
· Constructor: Requires the client to pass a value for the starting account balance. If this amount is less than 0,
print a message explaining the error and then stop the program with the following command: exit(1);
• withdraw: Allows the user to pass an amount to withdraw from the account. Returns true if successful and
false otherwise.
· If the amount would make 'balance' less than 0, do not perform the withdrawal. Simply print an error
message and return false.
• Otherwise, subtract the amount from 'balance, add a new Transaction with the given data to
'transactions', and return true.
· Deposit: Allows the user to pass an amount to deposit to the account. Add the given amount to 'balance' and
add a new Transaction to 'transactions' with the given data.
• printTransactions: Loops through the 'transactions' vector printing each Transaction one at a time (by calling
each object's 'print' function)
. getBalance: Returns the current balance in the account.
In your main function on Source.cpp, create an Account object with a starting balance of 0. Demonstrate each of the
functions being called (for example, perform a few deposits, a few withdrawals, print the transactions, and then print
the balance). This can all be hardcoded: there is no need for user input.
Submit: Transaction.cpp, Transaction.h, Source.cpp, Account.cpp, and Account.h](/v2/_next/image?url=https%3A%2F%2Fcontent.bartleby.com%2Fqna-images%2Fquestion%2F122c7060-cf03-40de-a20b-0aea68c956fa%2Fb36a0208-f22f-4373-ad8e-459c72796077%2F7nqx7ut_processed.png&w=3840&q=75)
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