A palindrome is a word, phrase, number or other sequence of characters that is read backwards and forwards in the same way, ignoring spaces, punctuation and case-sensitivity.
Your challenge is to write a C++ program that determines whether a string provided by the user is a palindrome or not.
**Requirements**:
* The program should ask the user to enter a string.
* It should then check whether the string is a palindrome or not.
* The program should ignore spaces, punctuation and case-sensitivity when checking whether the string is a palindrome.
* After checking, the program should display a message indicating whether the string is a palindrome or not.
**Example of execution**:
```c
Type a string: Ana
"The string is a palindrome."
Type a string: Ame a ema
"The string is a palindrome."
Type a string: Programacao
"The string is not a palindrome."
```
**Tip**:
* You can scroll the string from left to right and from right to left simultaneously to check if the matching characters are the same.
This is a simple c++ challenge that I want to see which of you will come up with the best answer, by creating a new post. don't forget to leave your comment or your **HANDSHACK** on the post
I think we’re gonna have to agree to disagree on this.
C++ is still used for some popular applications yes; this says about 10% which sounds pretty right to me. It’s definitely not in the “default language and only realistic option” position that it was in 20 years ago. I was a C++ programmer for years and years but at this stage there are just better things available. The last time I tried to work with C++ with manual memory management and .first and .second and templates and just the way it does things, I actually just wound up reimplementing the whole thing I was doing in another language rather than try to work within it.
If I were trying to teach beginning programmers right now, I would have them start with C to get comfortable with the guts of what’s really going on with their programs, and then once they were skilled with that, I’d teach them Python or Rust or Javascript or something as more of a “this is higher level more realistic option to do the bulk of a big programming project in” option.
But that is me, we’re allowed to have a difference of opinion about it.
I don’t think we do have a difference in opinion. What I’m saying is that some apps are done with many years of development, and in those case, C++ will likely be the only realistic option because it is way more time-consuming to switch. For example, Krita. I do agree that when there’s a choice, C++ is less relevant these day.
I get that. But why would that mean that you would choose C++ as the language to teach a new programmer in?