Input and Output Functions
Apart from 'cin' and 'cout', there are many other functions we can use to perform input/output operations.
We'll cover the following
Input
You can read in C++ in two way from the input stream: Formatted with the extractor >>
and unformatted with explicit methods.
Formatted Input
The extraction operator >>
- is predefined for all built-in types and strings,
- can be implemented for user-defined data types,
- can be configured by format specifiers.
🔑 std::cin ignores by default leading whitespace
#include <iostream> //... int a, b; std::cout << "Two natural numbers: " << std::endl; std::cin >> a >> b; // < 2000 11> std::cout << "a: " << a << " b: " << b;
Unformatted Input
There are many methods for the unformatted input from an input stream is
:
Method | Description |
---|---|
is.get(ch) |
Reads one character into ch . |
is.get(buf, num) |
Reads at most num characters into the buffer buf . |
is.getline(buf, num[, delim]) |
Reads at most num characters into the buffer buf . Uses optionally the line-delimiter delim (default \n ). |
is.gcount() |
Returns the number of characters that were last extracted from is by an unformatted operation. |
is.ignore(streamsize sz= 1, int delim= end-of-file) |
Ignores sz characters until delim . |
is.peek() |
Gets one characters from is without consuming it. |
is.unget() |
Pushes the last read character back to is . |
is.putback(ch) |
Pushes the character ch onto the stream is . |
Unformatted input from an input stream
🔑 std::string has a getline function
Thegetline
function of std::string has a big advantage above thegetline
function of theistream
. The std::string automatically takes care of its memory. On the contrary, you have to reserve the memory for the bufferbuf
in theis.get(buf, num)
function.
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