could any one tell me a开发者_运维问答bout some practical examples on using string streams in c++, i.e. inputing and outputing to a string stream using stream insertion and stream extraction operators?
You can use string streams to convert anything that implements operator <<
to a string:
#include <sstream>
template<typename T>
std::string toString(const T& t)
{
std::ostringstream stream;
stream << t;
return stream.str();
}
or even
template <typename U, typename T>
U convert(const T& t)
{
std::stringstream stream;
stream << t;
U u;
stream >> u;
return u;
}
I use them mostly as memory buffers, in creating messages:
if(someVector.size() > MAX_SIZE)
{
ostringstream buffer;
buffer << "Vector should not have " << someVector.size() << " eleements";
throw std::runtime_error(buffer.str());
}
or to construct complex strings:
std::string MyObject::GenerateDumpPath()
{
using namespace std;
std::ostringstream dumpPath;
// add the file name
dumpPath << "\\myobject."
<< setw(3) << setfill('0') << uniqueFileId
<< "." << boost::lexical_cast<std::string>(state)
<< "_" << ymd.year
<< "." << setw(2) << setfill('0') << ymd.month.as_number()
<< "." << ymd.day.as_number()
<< "_" << time.hours()
<< "." << time.minutes()
<< "." << time.seconds()
<< ".xml";
return dumpPath.str();
}
It is useful because it brings all the extensibility of std::stream
s to using character buffers (ostreams extensibility and locales support, buffer memory management is hidden and so on).
Another example I've seen was the error reporting in gsoap library, using dependency injection: soap_stream_fault takes an ostream& parameter to report error messages in.
If you want you can pass it std::cerr, std::cout or an std::ostringstream implementation (I use it with a std::ostringstream implementation).
They can be used anywhere a normal stream can be used.
So in situations where you were reading from a file you could potentially read from a string stream.
void compile(std::istream& str)
{
CPlusPlusLexer lexer(str);
CPlusPlusParser parser(lexer);
BackEnd backend(parser);
backend.compile();
}
int main()
{
std::fstream file("Plop.cpp");
compile(file);
std::stringstream test("#include <iostream>\n int main() { std::cout << \"H World\n\";}");
compile(test);
}
Besides advantages there is one point to carefully consider if you use gcc 4.3.1. I didn't checked preceding versions of gcc.
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