std::ostrstream::ostrstream
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< cpp | io | ostrstream
ostrstream(); |
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ostrstream(char* s, int n, std::ios_base::openmode mode = std::ios_base::out); |
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Constructs new output strstream and its underlying std::strstreambuf.
1) Default-constructs the underlying std::strstreambuf, which creates a dynamically growing buffer, and initializes the base class with the address of the strstreambuf member.
2) Initialized the base class with the address of the underlying std::strstreambuf member, which is initialized in one of the two possible ways, both of which write to user-provided fixed-size array:
a) if the
app
bit is not set in mode
, constructs the buffer by calling strstreambuf(s, n, s). The behavior is undefined if there are less than n
elements in the array whose first element is pointed to by s
b) if the
app
bit is set in mode
, constructs the buffer by calling strstreambuf(s, n, s + std::strlen(s)). The behavior is undefined if there are less than n
elements in the array whose first element is pointed to by s
or if the array does not contain a valid null-terminated character sequence.[edit] Parameters
s | - | char array to use as the output buffer | ||||||||||||||
n | - | size of the array to be used as the output buffer | ||||||||||||||
mode | - | specifies stream open mode. It is a bitmask type, the following constants are defined (although only app is used):
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[edit] Example
Run this code
#include <iostream> #include <strstream> int main() { std::ostrstream s1; // dynamic buffer s1 << 1 << ' ' << 3.14 << " example\n" << std::ends; std::cout << s1.str(); s1.freeze(false); char arr[15] = "Hello"; std::ostrstream s2(arr, sizeof arr, std::ios_base::app); s2 << ", world!" << std::ends; std::cout << s2.str() << '\n'; std::cout << arr << '\n'; // streams use the provided arrays }
Output:
1 3.14 example Hello, world! Hello, world!
[edit] See also
constructs a strstreambuf object (public member function of std::strstreambuf )
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constructs an strstream, optionally allocating the buffer (public member function of std::istrstream )
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constructs an strstream, optionally allocating the buffer (public member function of std::strstream )
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