To take sentence as a input in c++ - c++

I am trying to take the input of the two sentences one after the other,but while printing it is printing a blank space and in the next line it is printing the first sentence and the loop is exiting.
Here is my code:
int main()
{
char b[100000];
char c[100000];
int t;
cin>>t;
while(t--)
{
cin.getline(b,100000);
cin.getline(c,100000);
cout<<b<<"\n"<<c<<"\n";
}
}
The input:
1
run run
good sentence
The output:
Blankspace
run run

cin >>t;
This will prompt the user for some input. Assuming the user does what's expected of them, they will type some digits, and they will hit the enter key.
The digits will be stored in the input buffer, but so will a newline character, which was added by the fact that they hit the enter key.
cin will parse the digits to produce an integer, which it stores in the num variable. It stops at the newline character, which remains in the input buffer.
cin.getline(b,100000);
cin.getline(c,100000);
Later, you call cin.getline(b,100000);, which looks for a newline character in the input buffer. It finds one immediately, so it doesn't need to prompt the user for any more input. So it appears that the first call to getline didn't do anything, but actually it did.

Big arrays are not good idea. Try use std::string instead.
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
int main() {
std::string lineOne;
std::string lineTwo;
std::getline(std::cin, lineOne);
std::getline(std::cin, lineTwo);
std::cout << lineOne << "\n" << lineTwo;
return 0;
}

The reason is that cin>>t stops at the first non-numeric character, which is the newline. The next cin.getline(b,100000) will read this newline character into b and "run run" to c.
To avoid this, you can first read the newline character into somewhere else. Like
cin >> t;
// read the newline character
getchar();
while(t--){...}

Related

Does getline() not extract the delimiter?

So I was taking input some integers and then taking input some sentences.
This code works fine:
#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
main(){
int c,b,n,i;string s;
cin>>n>>b>>c;
for(i=0;i<n;i++){
cin>>ws;
getline(cin,s,'\n');
cout<<s;
}
}
Example:
3 3 3
This is weird
This is weirdDefinitely makes
Definitely makesNo sense
No sense
However, when I try to omit the cin>>ws inside the forloop, it doesn't work properly, eg this code segment,
#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
main(){
int c,b,n,i;string s;
cin>>n>>b>>c;
for(i=0;i<n;i++){
getline(cin,s,'\n');
cout<<s;
}
}
Example:
3 3 3
This is weird
This is weirdDefinitely makes
Definitely makes
..and terminates there instead of taking all three inputs.
Why is that? cin>>ws extracts all whitespace from the input but isn't getline() doing that too? So why does it not work properly when I omit cin>>ws in the forloop?
std::getline() extract characters until it extracted the first delimiter character (by default '\n'). The delimiter is not stored in the result but it is extracted. It does not extract whitespace in general or multiple delimiter characters.
As an aside: always check whether input works after trying to read a value.
In the example printed, the issue is is that after formatted input, i.e., using the >> operator, whitespaces are not extracted. That is, the first calls to std::getline() extracts the empty string terminated by the initial newline. It generally is necessary to extract trailing whitespace when switching between formatted and unformatted I/O. That is, You'd want code like
if (cin>>n>>b>>c >> std::ws) {
for(i=0;i<n;i++){
if (getline(cin,s,'\n')) {
cout << "i=" << i << ":'" << s << "'\n";
}
}
}
I can't recommend input operations without adding check for success. The output is changed to make it more easily visible what is going on: try the code with/without this particular std::endl to see what is happening.
When you use cin >> it doesn't remove any whitespace after the input. This means the newline that terminated the first 3 inputs is still in the buffer, waiting to be read by the first getline. Since there's nothing before the newline, the first getline delivered an empty string. Your output should have included a newline so you could have seen the empty line, then it would have made sense.
Originally the code you posted showed a cin >> ws just before the for loop which would have eliminated this problem.
The default delimiter for getline() is '\n', so there is no need to include that in the getline call, though, it should not change the functionality.
See for example Same as getline(input, str, input.widen('\n')), that is, the default delimiter is the endline character.
The change in formatting from the integer input to the getline() input leaves some whitespace (endl) after the integer as explained by #DietmarKühl.
You can change the getline() call to eliminate the delimiter to
getline(cin,s);
which will cause getline() to use '\n' as the default delimiter.
I have modified the 'n' variable to count and removed the other integers to make the code a little simpler to read:
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
int i; // index
int count; // number of strings to accept
std::string str;
std::cout << "Input the number of strings you would like me to process: " << std::endl;
std::cin >> count;
if (std::cin >> count >> std::ws) {
for (i = 0; i < count; i++) {
if (getline(std::cin, str)) {
std::cout << "i=" << i << ":'" << str << "'\n";
}
}
}
}
Cin doesn't extract all white spaces, it just gets the first word until the first white space. It is like having a getline with a space delimiter(not quite but close to).
Getline takes the whole line and has the default '\n' delimiter like mentioned above.
Ex:
string a = "Stack Overflow is awesome";
can give you Stack and getline will give you everything at that line

Cin in function [duplicate]

I wrote a very basic program in C++ which asked the user to input a number and then a string. To my surprise, when running the program it never stopped to ask for the string. It just skipped over it. After doing some reading on StackOverflow, I found out that I needed to add a line that said:
cin.ignore(256, '\n');
before the line that gets the string input. Adding that fixed the problem and made the program work. My question is why does C++ need this cin.ignore() line and how can I predict when I will need to use cin.ignore()?
Here is the program I wrote:
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
double num;
string mystr;
cout << "Please enter a number: " << "\n";
cin >> num;
cout << "Your number is: " << num << "\n";
cin.ignore(256, '\n'); // Why do I need this line?
cout << "Please enter your name: \n";
getline (cin, mystr);
cout << "So your name is " << mystr << "?\n";
cout << "Have a nice day. \n";
}
ignore does exactly what the name implies.
It doesn't "throw away" something you don't need. Instead, it ignores the number of characters you specify when you call it, up to the char you specify as a delimiter.
It works with both input and output buffers.
Essentially, for std::cin statements you use ignore before you do a getline call, because when a user inputs something with std::cin, they hit enter and a '\n' char gets into the cin buffer. Then if you use getline, it gets the newline char instead of the string you want. So you do a std::cin.ignore(1000,'\n') and that should clear the buffer up to the string that you want. (The 1000 is put there to skip over a specific number of chars before the specified delimiter, in this case, the '\n' newline character.)
You're thinking about this the wrong way. You're thinking in logical steps each time cin or getline is used. Ex. First ask for a number, then ask for a name. That is the wrong way to think about cin. So you run into a race condition because you assume the stream is clear each time you ask for a input.
If you write your program purely for input you'll find the problem:
int main()
{
double num;
string mystr;
cin >> num;
getline(cin, mystr);
cout << "num=" << num << ",mystr=\'" << mystr << "\'" << endl;
}
In the above, you are thinking, "first get a number." So you type in 123 press enter, and your output will be num=123,mystr=''. Why is that? It's because in the stream you have 123\n and the 123 is parsed into the num variable while \n is still in the stream. Reading the doc for getline function by default it will look in the istream until a \n is encountered. In this example, since \n is in the stream, it looks like it "skipped" it but it worked properly.
For the above to work, you'll have to enter 123Hello World which will properly output num=123,mystr='Hello World'. That, or you put a cin.ignore between the cin and getline so that it'll break into logical steps that you expect.
This is why you need the ignore command. Because you are thinking of it in logical steps rather than in a stream form so you run into a race condition.
Take another code example that is commonly found in schools:
int main()
{
int age;
string firstName;
string lastName;
cout << "First name: ";
cin >> firstName;
cout << "Last name: ";
cin >> lastName;
cout << "Age: ";
cin >> age;
cout << "Hello " << firstName << " " << lastName << "! You are " << age << " years old!" << endl;
}
The above seems to be in logical steps. First ask for first name, last name, then age. So if you did John enter, then Doe enter, then 19 enter, the application works each logic step. If you think of it in "streams" you can simply enter John Doe 19 on the "First name:" question and it would work as well and appear to skip the remaining questions. For the above to work in logical steps, you would need to ignore the remaining stream for each logical break in questions.
Just remember to think of your program input as it is reading from a "stream" and not in logical steps. Each time you call cin it is being read from a stream. This creates a rather buggy application if the user enters the wrong input. For example, if you entered a character where a cin >> double is expected, the application will produce a seemingly bizarre output.
Short answer
Why? Because there is still whitespace (carriage returns, tabs, spaces, newline) left in the input stream.
When? When you are using some function which does not on their own ignores the leading whitespaces. Cin by default ignores and removes the leading whitespace but getline does not ignore the leading whitespace on its own.
Now a detailed answer.
Everything you input in the console is read from the standard stream stdin. When you enter something, let's say 256 in your case and press enter, the contents of the stream become 256\n. Now cin picks up 256 and removes it from the stream and \n still remaining in the stream.
Now next when you enter your name, let's say Raddicus, the new contents of the stream is \nRaddicus.
Now here comes the catch.
When you try to read a line using getline, if not provided any delimiter as the third argument, getline by default reads till the newline character and removes the newline character from the stream.
So on calling new line, getline reads and discards \n from the stream and resulting in an empty string read in mystr which appears like getline is skipped (but it's not) because there was already an newline in the stream, getline will not prompt for input as it has already read what it was supposed to read.
Now, how does cin.ignore help here?
According to the ignore documentation extract from cplusplus.com-
istream& ignore (streamsize n = 1, int delim = EOF);
Extracts characters from the input sequence and discards them, until
either n characters have been extracted, or one compares equal to
delim.
The function also stops extracting characters if the end-of-file is
reached. If this is reached prematurely (before either extracting n
characters or finding delim), the function sets the eofbit flag.
So, cin.ignore(256, '\n');, ignores first 256 characters or all the character untill it encounters delimeter (here \n in your case), whichever comes first (here \n is the first character, so it ignores until \n is encountered).
Just for your reference, If you don't exactly know how many characters to skip and your sole purpose is to clear the stream to prepare for reading a string using getline or cin you should use cin.ignore(numeric_limits<streamsize>::max(),'\n').
Quick explanation: It ignores the characters equal to maximum size of stream or until a '\n' is encountered, whichever case happens first.
When you want to throw away a specific number of characters from the input stream manually.
A very common use case is using this to safely ignore newline characters since cin will sometimes leave newline characters that you will have to go over to get to the next line of input.
Long story short it gives you flexibility when handling stream input.
Ignore function is used to skip(discard/throw away) characters in the input stream. Ignore file is associated with the file istream.
Consider the function below
ex: cin.ignore(120,'/n');
the particular function skips the next 120 input character or to skip the characters until a newline character is read.
As pointed right by many other users. It's because there may be whitespace or a newline character.
Consider the following code, it removes all the duplicate characters from a given string.
#include <bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int main() {
int t;
cin>>t;
cin.ignore(); //Notice that this cin.ignore() is really crucial for any extra whitespace or newline character
while(t--){
vector<int> v(256,0);
string s;
getline(cin,s);
string s2;
for(int i=0;i<s.size();i++){
if (v[s[i]]) continue;
else{
s2.push_back(s[i]);
v[s[i]]++;
}
}
cout<<s2<<endl;
}
return 0;
}
So, You get the point that it will ignore those unwanted inputs and will get the job done.
It is better to use scanf(" %[^\n]",str) in c++ than cin.ignore() after cin>> statement.To do that first you have to include < cstdio > header.

Reading sentences as string inputs from users

I have been trying to implement a simple code which takes a sentence as an input from the user, stores it in a string and displays it back.
Here are the issues:
1. When T = 1, the program exits immediately.
2. When T>1, the loop runs for only T-1 times.
I think the usage of cin to store the value of T is an issue here. Is the value of T entered being stored as a string due to some buffer capacity of cin?
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
int main()
{
int T;
std::cin >> T;
while (T--)
{
std::string song;
getline(std::cin, song);
std::cout << song << std::endl;
}
return 0;
}
How do you terminate the input that becomes T? With a newline. What happens with that newline after you read into T? It's still left in the input buffer. What will happen when you next call std::getline, what is the first character it will read? The newline, and what happens next? The loop iterates and then T is zero (for the first case where T was originally 1) and the loop and then the program exits.
The solution to this problem is to ignore characters up to and including the newline.
Add a getchar after cin as the \n after the input of T stays in buffer.
std::cin >> T;
getchar();
This is a strange way to do it. So you ask the user to tell the program, before any other input, how many lines will follow? Why not simply:
std::string s;
while (getline(std::cin, s)) {
std::cout << s << std::endl;
}
(This will simply echo every line (press enter to end the line) until end-of-file (Ctrl-d).
Either way, the problem with your code is the while (T--): so why don't you try to see what your T is, and what your getline gives you on each iteration? (I will let you figure it out on your own). Why not use the idiomatic:
for (int i = 0; i < T; ++i)
?
P.S. If you want to read sentences, and not lines, you might want to consider reading up to a delimiter (for example .). getline will do that for you, too:
getline(std::cin, s, '.');

When and why do I need to use cin.ignore() in C++?

I wrote a very basic program in C++ which asked the user to input a number and then a string. To my surprise, when running the program it never stopped to ask for the string. It just skipped over it. After doing some reading on StackOverflow, I found out that I needed to add a line that said:
cin.ignore(256, '\n');
before the line that gets the string input. Adding that fixed the problem and made the program work. My question is why does C++ need this cin.ignore() line and how can I predict when I will need to use cin.ignore()?
Here is the program I wrote:
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
double num;
string mystr;
cout << "Please enter a number: " << "\n";
cin >> num;
cout << "Your number is: " << num << "\n";
cin.ignore(256, '\n'); // Why do I need this line?
cout << "Please enter your name: \n";
getline (cin, mystr);
cout << "So your name is " << mystr << "?\n";
cout << "Have a nice day. \n";
}
ignore does exactly what the name implies.
It doesn't "throw away" something you don't need. Instead, it ignores the number of characters you specify when you call it, up to the char you specify as a delimiter.
It works with both input and output buffers.
Essentially, for std::cin statements you use ignore before you do a getline call, because when a user inputs something with std::cin, they hit enter and a '\n' char gets into the cin buffer. Then if you use getline, it gets the newline char instead of the string you want. So you do a std::cin.ignore(1000,'\n') and that should clear the buffer up to the string that you want. (The 1000 is put there to skip over a specific number of chars before the specified delimiter, in this case, the '\n' newline character.)
You're thinking about this the wrong way. You're thinking in logical steps each time cin or getline is used. Ex. First ask for a number, then ask for a name. That is the wrong way to think about cin. So you run into a race condition because you assume the stream is clear each time you ask for a input.
If you write your program purely for input you'll find the problem:
int main()
{
double num;
string mystr;
cin >> num;
getline(cin, mystr);
cout << "num=" << num << ",mystr=\'" << mystr << "\'" << endl;
}
In the above, you are thinking, "first get a number." So you type in 123 press enter, and your output will be num=123,mystr=''. Why is that? It's because in the stream you have 123\n and the 123 is parsed into the num variable while \n is still in the stream. Reading the doc for getline function by default it will look in the istream until a \n is encountered. In this example, since \n is in the stream, it looks like it "skipped" it but it worked properly.
For the above to work, you'll have to enter 123Hello World which will properly output num=123,mystr='Hello World'. That, or you put a cin.ignore between the cin and getline so that it'll break into logical steps that you expect.
This is why you need the ignore command. Because you are thinking of it in logical steps rather than in a stream form so you run into a race condition.
Take another code example that is commonly found in schools:
int main()
{
int age;
string firstName;
string lastName;
cout << "First name: ";
cin >> firstName;
cout << "Last name: ";
cin >> lastName;
cout << "Age: ";
cin >> age;
cout << "Hello " << firstName << " " << lastName << "! You are " << age << " years old!" << endl;
}
The above seems to be in logical steps. First ask for first name, last name, then age. So if you did John enter, then Doe enter, then 19 enter, the application works each logic step. If you think of it in "streams" you can simply enter John Doe 19 on the "First name:" question and it would work as well and appear to skip the remaining questions. For the above to work in logical steps, you would need to ignore the remaining stream for each logical break in questions.
Just remember to think of your program input as it is reading from a "stream" and not in logical steps. Each time you call cin it is being read from a stream. This creates a rather buggy application if the user enters the wrong input. For example, if you entered a character where a cin >> double is expected, the application will produce a seemingly bizarre output.
Short answer
Why? Because there is still whitespace (carriage returns, tabs, spaces, newline) left in the input stream.
When? When you are using some function which does not on their own ignores the leading whitespaces. Cin by default ignores and removes the leading whitespace but getline does not ignore the leading whitespace on its own.
Now a detailed answer.
Everything you input in the console is read from the standard stream stdin. When you enter something, let's say 256 in your case and press enter, the contents of the stream become 256\n. Now cin picks up 256 and removes it from the stream and \n still remaining in the stream.
Now next when you enter your name, let's say Raddicus, the new contents of the stream is \nRaddicus.
Now here comes the catch.
When you try to read a line using getline, if not provided any delimiter as the third argument, getline by default reads till the newline character and removes the newline character from the stream.
So on calling new line, getline reads and discards \n from the stream and resulting in an empty string read in mystr which appears like getline is skipped (but it's not) because there was already an newline in the stream, getline will not prompt for input as it has already read what it was supposed to read.
Now, how does cin.ignore help here?
According to the ignore documentation extract from cplusplus.com-
istream& ignore (streamsize n = 1, int delim = EOF);
Extracts characters from the input sequence and discards them, until
either n characters have been extracted, or one compares equal to
delim.
The function also stops extracting characters if the end-of-file is
reached. If this is reached prematurely (before either extracting n
characters or finding delim), the function sets the eofbit flag.
So, cin.ignore(256, '\n');, ignores first 256 characters or all the character untill it encounters delimeter (here \n in your case), whichever comes first (here \n is the first character, so it ignores until \n is encountered).
Just for your reference, If you don't exactly know how many characters to skip and your sole purpose is to clear the stream to prepare for reading a string using getline or cin you should use cin.ignore(numeric_limits<streamsize>::max(),'\n').
Quick explanation: It ignores the characters equal to maximum size of stream or until a '\n' is encountered, whichever case happens first.
When you want to throw away a specific number of characters from the input stream manually.
A very common use case is using this to safely ignore newline characters since cin will sometimes leave newline characters that you will have to go over to get to the next line of input.
Long story short it gives you flexibility when handling stream input.
Ignore function is used to skip(discard/throw away) characters in the input stream. Ignore file is associated with the file istream.
Consider the function below
ex: cin.ignore(120,'/n');
the particular function skips the next 120 input character or to skip the characters until a newline character is read.
As pointed right by many other users. It's because there may be whitespace or a newline character.
Consider the following code, it removes all the duplicate characters from a given string.
#include <bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int main() {
int t;
cin>>t;
cin.ignore(); //Notice that this cin.ignore() is really crucial for any extra whitespace or newline character
while(t--){
vector<int> v(256,0);
string s;
getline(cin,s);
string s2;
for(int i=0;i<s.size();i++){
if (v[s[i]]) continue;
else{
s2.push_back(s[i]);
v[s[i]]++;
}
}
cout<<s2<<endl;
}
return 0;
}
So, You get the point that it will ignore those unwanted inputs and will get the job done.
It is better to use scanf(" %[^\n]",str) in c++ than cin.ignore() after cin>> statement.To do that first you have to include < cstdio > header.

C++ while loop and string length

If I have the following C++ code:
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
int main()
{
std::string str;
while (std::cin>>str)
std::cout<<str<<"\n";
std::cout<<str.length(); // UPDATE: str.length
return 0;
}
When I run the program and don't type a string and press Enter, I get an empty output. Does that mean that the while loop ran and considered that there is an input even it was empty?
How can I terminate this loop?
Finally, why don't I get the length of the string in my output?
UPDATE: I want to solve the issue using string functions
Thanks.
Because "enter" produces "carrier return" symbol. It is invisible and just starts the new line.
You can use an istream object and use get() function, which return the number of characters read:
char ch;
while(cin.get(ch))
{
}
Write the code this way and set a breakpoint in line 4:
std::string str;
while (std::cin >> str)
{
std::cout << "you typed: " << str << "\n";
std::cout << "str.length(): " << str.length() << "\n";;
}
In the while loop, std::cin>>str will return true if std::cin successfully read data into str, else it will return false.
Since std::cin can always read data from the input stream, that means, while(std::cin >> str) will be an infinite loop, unless you press some key that generates EOF character. The combination of keys that produces EOF, depends on OS.There is one more thing that can produce EOF, which is if you close the input stream!
The input:
std::cin>>str
Reads one [white] space separated word from the stream.
White space include (space/tab and new line).
This means it ignores all white space until it gets a non-white space character. It then reads characters until it gets a white space character.
Thus if you just hit newline (enter) it will ignore the character. It keeps ignoring until it gets to a word.
If you want to make the loop finish. You have two choices. Look for a special word. Or inject an EOF character into the stream. On Unix/Linux this is done with <ctrl>-D on WIndows <ctrl>-Z