The function
shift()
adds its arguments to the corresponding
world_coordinates
of a Point
. In the following example,
the function show()
is used to print the world_coordinates
of p0
to standard output.
Point p0(0, 0, 0); p0.shift(1, 2, 3); p0.show("p0:"); -| p0: (1, 2, 3) p0.shift(10); p0.show("p0:"); -| p0: (11, 2, 3) p0.shift(0, 20); p0.show("p0:"); -| p0: (11, 22, 3) p0.shift(0, 0, 30); p0.show("p0:"); -| p0: (11, 22, 33)
shift
takes three real
arguments, whereby the second and
third are optional. To shift a Point
in the direction of
the positive or negative y-axis, and/or the positive or negative z-axis
only, then a 0 argument for the
x direction, and possibly one for the y direction
must be used as placeholders, as in the example above.
shift()
can be invoked with a Point
argument
instead of real
arguments. In this case, the x, y, and
z-coordinates of the argument are used for shifting the Point
:
Point a(10, 10, 10); Point b(1, 2, 3); a.shift(b); a.show("a:") -| a: (11, 12, 13)
Another way of shifting Points
is to use the binary +=
operator (Point::operator+=()
) with a Point
argument.
Point a0(1, 1, 1); Point a1(2, 2, 2); a0 += a1; a0.show("a0:"); -| a0: (3, 3, 3)