Write in C++:
OVERVIEW
Using a two-dimensional array, you will create the game battleship using a text file that contains
the board. The user will enter coordinates to try and find ships and sink them.
INSTRUCTIONS
Imagine you are using a two-dimensional array as the basis for creating the game battleship. In
the game of battleship, a `~' character entry in the array represents ocean (i.e., not a ship), a `#'
character represents a place in the ocean where part of a ship is present, and a `H' character
represents a place in the ocean where part of a ship is present and has been hit by a torpedo.
Thus, a ship with all `H' characters means the ship has been sunk.
Declare a two-dimensional array that is 25 x 25 that represents the entire ocean and an If
statement that prints "HIT" if a torpedo hits a ship given the coordinates X and Y.
Create a text file of 25 line. Each line has 25 characters. ~ represents water and # represents part
of a ship. This file is the battleship game board. An example file might look like:
Then write a C++ program that will read in the file representing the game board with 25 lines
where each line has 25 characters corresponding to the description above.
You must write a function called Fire() that will take an X and Y coordinate and print "HIT" if a
ship is hit and "MISS" if a ship is missed. If a ship is HIT you must update the array with an `H'
character to indicate the ship was hit. If a ship is hit that has already been hit at that location, you
must print "HIT AGAIN". You must write a second function called FleetSunk() that will
determine if all the ships have been sunk.
Your C++ program must then call these functions until all the ships have been sunk at which
point the program should display "The fleet was destroyed!” When the fleet has been sunk, end
by printing to the screen your game array showing all HITS and MISSES.