This is a very strange problem, when my program asks the user for the address, instead of waiting for input, it seems to skip the getline() function completely
Answerinput:
cout << "would you like to add another entry to the archive? (Y/N):";
cin >> answer;
cout << endl;
cout << endl;
answer = toupper(answer);
switch(answer)
{
case 'Y':
Entrynumber++;
cout << "began record number " << Entrynumber << "+ 1." << endl;
cout << "Enter the last name of the person to be entered" << endl;
cin >> stringentry;
cout << endl;
stringlength = stringentry.length();
strcpy(Record[Entrynumber].Last_Name, stringentry.c_str());
Record[Entrynumber].Last_Name[stringlength] = '*';
cout << "Enter the first name of the person" << endl;
cin >> stringentry;
cout << endl;
stringlength = stringentry.length();
strcpy(Record[Entrynumber].First_Name, stringentry.c_str());
Record[Entrynumber].First_Name[stringlength] = '*';
cout << "Enter the SSN of the person" << endl;
cin >> Record[Entrynumber].SSN;
cout << endl;
cout << "Enter the age of the person" << endl;
cin >> Record[Entrynumber].Age;
cout << endl;
cout << "Enter the address of the person" << endl;
cin.getline(Record[Entrynumber].Address,70);
cout << endl;
stringentry = Record[Entrynumber].Address;
stringlength = stringentry.length();
Record[Entrynumber].Address[stringlength] = '*';
cout << "you entered:" << endl;
for(jim = 0 ; Record[Entrynumber].Last_Name[jim + 1] != '*' ; jim++)
{
cout << Record[Entrynumber].Last_Name[jim];
}
cout << ',' ;
for(jim = 0 ; Record[Entrynumber].First_Name[jim + 1] != '*' ; jim++)
{
cout << Record[Entrynumber].First_Name[jim];
}
cout << endl;
cout << Record[Entrynumber].SSN << endl;
cout << Record[Entrynumber].Age << endl;
for(jim = 0 ; Record[Entrynumber].Address[jim + 1] != '*' ; jim++)
{
cout << Record[Entrynumber].Address[jim];
}
cout << endl;
cout << endl;
goto Answerinput;
case 'N':
cout << "ok" << endl;
break;
default:
cout << "invalid answer" << endl;
goto Answerinput;
}
output to console
would you like to add another entry to
the archive? (Y/N):Y
began record number 6+ 1.
Enter the last name of the person to be entered
John
Enter the first name of the person
John
Enter the SSN of the person 22222222
Enter the age of the person 22
Enter the address of the person
you entered:
Joh,Joh
22222222
22
*¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦
//////////////22 more lines of'|'//////////////////////////////////////////////
...
¦¦¦¦¦¦¦¦l3-j
would you like to add another entry to the archive? (Y/N):
Both cin.getline() and getline() do the same thing.
I'm using MVC++ 2008.
All of the fields in the Record array are structs, Record[Entrynumber].Address is a char array.
Cin is probably leaving the carriage return in the buffer which getline retrieves. Try
cin.ignore(1000, '\n');
cin.getline(Record[Entrynumber].Address,70);
The >> operator doesn't remove the newline character after retrieving data, but ignores leading whitespace before retrieving data, while getline just retrieves whatever is in there, and removes the '\n' after reading as it is apart of the line it is 'getting'.
Seeing as how there might be input left over in the buffer which your getline is reading first, I'd suggest you clear the buffer before trying to input the next data:
std::cin.ignore(std::numeric_limits<std::streamsize>::max(),'\n');
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