Why does my program not output:
10
1.546
,Apple 1
instead of
10
1
here\'s my program
In IOStreams, strings (meaning both C-strings and C++ strings) have virtually no formatting requirements. Any and all characters are extracted into a string only until a whitespace character is found, or until the end of the stream is caught. In your example, you're using a string intended to eat up the commas between the important data, but the output you are experiencing is the result of the behavior I just explained: The dummy
string doesn't just eat the comma, but also the rest of the character sequence until the next whitespace character.
To avoid this you can use a char
for the dummy variable, which only has space for one character. And if you're looking to put Apple 1
into a string you will need an unformatted extraction because the formatted extractor operator>>()
only reads until whitespace. The appropriate function to use here is std::getline()
:
string c;
char dummy;
if ((stream >> a >> dummy >> b >> dummy) &&
std::getline(stream >> std::ws, s))
// ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^
{
}
Clearing the newline after the formatted extraction is also necessary which is why I used std::ws
to clear leading whitespace. I'm also using an if
statement to contain the extraction in order to tell if it succeeded or not.
Any smoother way to do this would help me immensely.
You can set the classification of the comma character to a whitespace character using the std::ctype<char>
facet of the locale imbued in the stream. This will make the use of a dummy variable unnecessary. Here's an example:
namespace detail
{
enum options { add, remove };
class ctype : public std::ctype<char>
{
private:
static mask* get_table(const std::string& ws, options opt)
{
static std::vector<mask> table(classic_table(),
classic_table() + table_size);
for (char c : ws)
{
if (opt == add)
table[c] |= space;
else if (opt == remove)
table[c] &= ~space;
}
return &table[0];
}
public:
ctype(const std::string& ws, options opt)
: std::ctype<char>(get_table(ws, opt)) { }
};
}
class adjustws_impl
{
public:
adjustws_impl(const std::string& ws, detail::options opt) :
m_ws(ws),
m_opt(opt)
{ }
friend std::istream& operator>>(std::istream& is,
const adjustws_impl& manip)
{
const detail::ctype* facet(new detail::ctype(manip.m_ws, manip.m_opt));
if (!std::has_facet<detail::ctype>(is.getloc())
{
is.imbue(std::locale(is.getloc(), facet));
} else
delete facet;
return is;
}
private:
std::string m_ws;
detail::options m_opt;
};
adjustws_impl setws(const std::string& ws)
{
return adjustws_impl(ws, detail::add);
}
adjustws_impl unsetws(const std::string& ws)
{
return adjustws_impl(ws, detail::remove);
}
int main()
{
std::istringstream iss("10,1.546,Apple 1");
int a; double b; std::string c;
iss >> setws(","); // set comma to a whitespace character
if ((iss >> a >> b) && std::getline(iss >> std::ws, c))
{
// ...
}
iss >> unsetws(","); // remove the whitespace classification
}
I could manage to change my code a little. Didn't implement 0x499602D2
method yet, but here is what worked for me.
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <cstdlib>
#include <sstream>
using namespace std;
int main () {
string str = "10,1.546,Apple 1";
istringstream stream (str);
int a;
double b;
string c;
string token;
while (getline (stream, token, ',')) {
if (token.find (".") == string::npos && token.find (" ") == string::npos) {
a = atoi (token.c_str ());
} else if (token.find (".") != string::npos) {
b = atof (token.c_str ());
} else {
c = string (token);
}
}
cout << a << endl;
cout << b << endl;
cout << c << endl;
return 0;
}
You should do the below changes:
string str = "10 1.546 Apple 1";
And
stream >> a >> b >> dummy >> c;
In your example, dummy would have got the string ",1.546,Apple" . Because till a non-numeric char is encountered, it is fed to variable a. After that everything is added to dummy ( a string ) until the default delimiter (space) is reached
Allow me to suggest the following.
I don't consider it 'smoother', as cin / cout dialogue is not 'smooth', imho.
But I think this might be closer to what you want.
int main (int, char**)
{
// always initialize your variables
// to value you would not expect from input
int a = -99;
double b = 0.0;
std::string c("");
char comma1 = 'Z';
char comma2 = 'z';
std::string str = "10,1.546,Apple 1";
std::istringstream ss(str);
ss >> a >> comma1 >> b >> comma2;
// the last parameter has the default delimiter in it
(void)getline(ss, c, '\n'); // to get past this default delimiter,
// specify a different delimiter
std::cout << std::endl;
std::cout << a << " '" << comma1 << "' " << std::endl;
std::cout << b << " '" << comma2 << "' " << std::endl;
std::cout << c << std::endl;
return 0;
}
Results: (and, of course, you need not do anything with the commas.)
10 ','
1.546 ','
Apple 1