Is there some "default" way of reading in a newline character, or is that something I'll have to figure out on my own? Getting really late here (3:30 AM) so I'm going to recharge my batteries and solve this tomorrow. I do have one question before I go to bed.
for (int i = 0; i < size; i++){ myArray = myString; otherArray = myArray;}
If you then std::cout otherArray it shows up with these odd things like /219 and /340 or something. Why?
I have a programmer friend that said that "using namespace std;" is the devil's invention. Good programming habits are welcome, so anything I can pick up along the way is just on the plus side.
This exercise really shouldn't be hard, I've found a way (I think) of making it read a char at a time and then store it in a char array, I just couldn't figure out how to break the loop the way I want it to. I should look into your post more, Atrix256, gave me idea to ditch the for-loop there and try a different type of loop.
BRB =D