I\'m pulling numbers from a text file and filling an array of type int with them.
I\'m inserting the values into the array while looping through the .txt file with t
The standard requires that if the input value is out of range, the nearest available value is written to the destination, and the stream's failbit
is set. The specific requirement (from [istream.formatted.arithmetic]/3) is:
operator>>(int& val);
The conversion occurs as if performed by the following code fragment [...]:
iostate err = ios_base::goodbit; long lval; use_facet<numget>(loc).get(*this, 0, *this, err, lval); if (lval < numeric_limits<int>::min()) { err |= ios_base::failbit; val = numeric_limits<int>::min(); } else if (numeric_limits<int>::max() < lval) { err |= ios_base::failbit; val = numeric_limits<int>::max(); } else val = static_cast<int>(lval); setstate(err);
Once the stream's failbit is set, it's "sticky", so further attempts at extracting data will all fail immediately until the failbit is cleared.
Undefined behaviour. Arithmetical overflow may be silently ignored or may cause a signal to be raised which terminates the program, depending on quality of implementation.
On std::istream& std::istream::operator>>(std::istream&, int&), cppreference says:
Behaves as a FormattedInputFunction. After constructing and checking the sentry object, which may skip leading whitespace, extracts an integer value by calling
std::num_get::get()
...
If extraction fails, zero is written to value and failbit is set. If extraction results in the value too large or too small to fit in value,
std::numeric_limits<T>::max()
orstd::numeric_limits<T>::min()
is written and failbit flag is set. (since c++11)
It's not normative, but it does provide a decent summary of what is happening here.
FormattedInputFunctions will construct a sentry from the stream and check the value. If the sentry object evaluates as false
, then no input is performed.
The sentry object will evaluate as false
if, among other situations, the stream being operated on has the failbit set.
So, what's happening is this:
int
data type. int
passed into its function is set to the maximum possible value an int
can store.You can detect these overflow errors by checking the failbit and value of the integer after the read operation you are performing, as mentioned in the accepted answer to the question Read int from istream, detect overflow.
You can recover from these errors by unsetting the failbit with std::basic_ios::clear. Following a call to clear
which unsets the failbit, further reads will behave as you expect.