How do I run another program from a C++ program - c++

I am trying to call on another program to perform a function (I have no idea what, only that it is not written in C++, but in shell) on a file within my C++ program. I do not know how to actually perform the function within my program. I do know that I write something like this
system(PROGRAM HERE);
The problem is that I do not know exactly how I am supposed to type the program out. I believe that if the function were to be called dostuff, I would type out
system("dostuff");
... I think. But what if there are arguments attached to that function that I would give as variables within my C++ program? That is what I would really need help with. In the terminal, I would type in "dostuff -1 arg". So in C++ would I type out
int arg = 5;
system("dostuff" arg);

You could format the string first. With <sstream> included:
int arg = 5;
std::stringstream ss;
ss << "dostuff " << arg;
system(ss.str().c_str());
Alternatively, you could use the concatenation feature of std::string. If you prefer the C-style formatters, you could use snprintf to similar effect.

Simple answer is
system("dostuff -1 5");
Essentially you need to construct the terminal argument and pass that to the system call.
Ex:
int arg = 5;
std::stringstream command;
command << "dostuff -1 " << arg;
system(command.str());

Related

Write a string to char while passing arguments to the string

I have the following code:
char szBuf[256] = "";
std::string szFmt = "You have recieved %s item."
string szName = "Fork";
snprintf(szBuf, sizeof(szBuf), szFmt.c_str(), szName);
I'm trying to combine szFmt with szBuf while combining szFmt with szName according to.However, when I execute this code in win10, I getting such an weird output:
You've received the LÃý item.
And when I try to execute the code in OSX El Capitan, I'm getting the following error
cannot pass object of non-trivial type 'string' throgh variadic function;
call will about at runtime
So what is the problem, and how can I solve this?
Note: I checked this question, but in the answer, they are passing directly "Fork", which also works in me; however it doesn't work when I pass it as szName.
Better solutions were mentioned in the comments (ostringstream) but for further educational value, I'll address the immediate problem here.
Varargs (the mechanism through which the printf family of functions can accept a variable number of arguments) are not as strictly type checked as the rest. In this case, snprintf is expecting a char* to the string, but you're passing szName which is a string object. So you need to call .c_str() on that as well:
snprintf(szBuf, sizeof(szBuf), szFmt.c_str(), szName.c_str());
Using std::ostringstream will simplify things, especially since it's more type-safe than the printf functions inherited from C, but also since it can handle all standard types and with proper overloading of the output operator << you can also use it very easily for custom classes.
The important thing to remember with std::ostringstream is that it is an ordinary output stream, just like std::cout, and if you can use std::cout then you can also use std::ostringstream (or any other standard output stream).
Now for how to use it:
std::ostringstream ostr; // Define the stream object
ostr << "You have recieved " << szName << " item.";
And that's about it.
To access the string you use the str function:
std::cout << "The output is " << ostr.str() << '\n';
And if you want to copy it into a char buffer for some reason:
// Use `strncpy` to not overflow the destination buffer
std::strncpy(szBuf, ostr.str().c_str(), sizeof szBuf - 1);
// Remember that `strncpy` might not terminate the destination, so do it explicitly
szBuf[sizeof szBuf - 1] = '\0';

How to cleanly use: const char* and std::string?

tl:dr
How can I concatenate const char* with std::string, neatly and
elegantly, without multiple function calls. Ideally in one function
call and have the output be a const char*. Is this impossible, what
is an optimum solution?
Initial Problem
The biggest barrier I have experienced with C++ so far is how it handles strings. In my opinion, of all the widely used languages, it handles strings the most poorly. I've seen other questions similar to this that either have an answer saying "use std::string" or simply point out that one of the options is going to be best for your situation.
However this is useless advice when trying to use strings dynamically like how they are used in other languages. I cannot guaranty to always be able to use std::string and for the times when I have to use const char* I hit the obvious wall of "it's constant, you can't concatenate it".
Every solution to any string manipulation problem I've seen in C++ requires repetitive multiple lines of code that only work well for that format of string.
I want to be able to concatenate any set of characters with the + symbol or make use of a simple format() function just how I can in C# or Python. Why is there no easy option?
Current Situation
Standard Output
I'm writing a DLL and so far I've been output text to cout via the << operator. Everything has been going fine so far using simple char arrays in the form:
cout << "Hello world!"
Runtime Strings
Now it comes to the point where I want to construct a string at runtime and store it with a class, this class will hold a string that reports on some errors so that they can be picked up by other classes and maybe sent to cout later, the string will be set by the function SetReport(const char* report). So I really don't want to use more than one line for this so I go ahead and write something like:
SetReport("Failure in " + __FUNCTION__ + ": foobar was " + foobar + "\n"); // __FUNCTION__ gets the name of the current function, foobar is some variable
Immediately of course I get:
expression must have integral or unscoped enum type and...
'+': cannot add two pointers
Ugly Strings
Right. So I'm trying to add two or more const char*s together and this just isn't an option. So I find that the main suggestion here is to use std::string, sort of weird that typing "Hello world!" doesn't just give you one of those in the first place but let's give it a go:
SetReport(std::string("Failure in ") + std::string(__FUNCTION__) + std::string(": foobar was ") + std::to_string(foobar) + std::string("\n"));
Brilliant! It works! But look how ugly that is!! That's some of the ugliest code I've every seen. We can simplify to this:
SetReport(std::string("Failure in ") + __FUNCTION__ + ": foobar was " + std::to_string(foobar) + "\n");
Still possibly the worst way I've every encounter of getting to a simple one line string concatenation but everything should be fine now right?
Convert Back To Constant
Well no, if you're working on a DLL, something that I tend to do a lot because I like to unit test so I need my C++ code to be imported by the unit test library, you will find that when you try to set that report string to a member variable of a class as a std::string the compiler throws a warning saying:
warning C4251: class 'std::basic_string<_Elem,_Traits,_Alloc>' needs to have dll-interface to be used by clients of class'
The only real solution to this problem that I've found other than "ignore the warning"(bad practice!) is to use const char* for the member variable rather than std::string but this is not really a solution, because now you have to convert your ugly concatenated (but dynamic) string back to the const char array you need. But you can't just tag .c_str() on the end (even though why would you want to because this concatenation is becoming more ridiculous by the second?) you have to make sure that std::string doesn't clean up your newly constructed string and leave you with garbage. So you have to do this inside the function that receives the string:
const std::string constString = (input);
m_constChar = constString.c_str();
Which is insane. Because now I traipsed across several different types of string, made my code ugly, added more lines than should need and all just to stick some characters together. Why is this so hard?
Solution?
So what's the solution? I feel that I should be able to make a function that concatenates const char*s together but also handle other object types such as std::string, int or double, I feel strongly that this should be capable in one line, and yet I'm unable to find any examples of it being achieved. Should I be working with char* rather than the constant variant, even though I've read that you should never change the value of char* so how would this help?
Are there any experienced C++ programmers who have resolved this issue and are now comfortable with C++ strings, what is your solution? Is there no solution? Is it impossible?
The standard way to build a string, formatting non-string types as strings, is a string stream
#include <sstream>
std::ostringstream ss;
ss << "Failure in " << __FUNCTION__ << ": foobar was " << foobar << "\n";
SetReport(ss.str());
If you do this often, you could write a variadic template to do that:
template <typename... Ts> std::string str(Ts&&...);
SetReport(str("Failure in ", __FUNCTION__, ": foobar was ", foobar, '\n'));
The implementation is left as an exercise for the reader.
In this particular case, string literals (including __FUNCTION__) can be concatenated by simply writing one after the other; and, assuming foobar is a std::string, that can be concatenated with string literals using +:
SetReport("Failure in " __FUNCTION__ ": foobar was " + foobar + "\n");
If foobar is a numeric type, you could use std::to_string(foobar) to convert it.
Plain string literals (e.g. "abc" and __FUNCTION__) and char const* do not support concatenation. These are just plain C-style char const[] and char const*.
Solutions are to use some string formatting facilities or libraries, such as:
std::string and concatenation using +. May involve too many unnecessary allocations, unless operator+ employs expression templates.
std::snprintf. This one does not allocate buffers for you and not type safe, so people end up creating wrappers for it.
std::stringstream. Ubiquitous and standard but its syntax is at best awkward.
boost::format. Type safe but reportedly slow.
cppformat. Reportedly modern and fast.
One of the simplest solution is to use an C++ empty string. Here I declare empty string variable named _ and used it in front of string concatenation. Make sure you always put it in the front.
#include <cstdio>
#include <string>
using namespace std;
string _ = "";
int main() {
char s[] = "chararray";
string result =
_ + "function name = [" + __FUNCTION__ + "] "
"and s is [" + s + "]\n";
printf( "%s", result.c_str() );
return 0;
}
Output:
function name = [main] and s is [chararray]
Regarding __FUNCTION__, I found that in Visual C++ it is a macro while in GCC it is a variable, so SetReport("Failure in " __FUNCTION__ "; foobar was " + foobar + "\n"); will only work on Visual C++. See: https://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/b0084kay.aspx and https://gcc.gnu.org/onlinedocs/gcc/Function-Names.html
The solution using empty string variable above should work on both Visual C++ and GCC.
My Solution
I've continued to experiment with different things and I've got a solution which combines tivn's answer that involves making an empty string to help concatenate long std::string and character arrays together and a function of my own which allows single line copying of that std::string to a const char* which is safe to use when the string object leaves scope.
I would have used Mike Seymour's variadic templates but they don't seem to be supported by the Visual Studio 2012 I'm running and I need this solution to be very general so I can't rely on them.
Here is my solution:
Strings.h
#ifndef _STRINGS_H_
#define _STRINGS_H_
#include <string>
// tivn's empty string in the header file
extern const std::string _;
// My own version of .c_str() which produces a copy of the contents of the string input
const char* ToCString(std::string input);
#endif
Strings.cpp
#include "Strings.h"
const std::string str = "";
const char* ToCString(std::string input)
{
char* result = new char[input.length()+1];
strcpy_s(result, input.length()+1, input.c_str());
return result;
}
Usage
m_someMemberConstChar = ToCString(_ + "Hello, world! " + someDynamicValue);
I think this is pretty neat and works in most cases. Thank you everyone for helping me with this.
As of C++20, fmtlib has made its way into the ISO standard but, even on older iterations, you can still download and use it.
It gives similar capabilities as Python's str.format()(a), and your "ugly strings" example then becomes a relatively simple:
#include <fmt/format.h>
// Later on, where code is allowed (inside a function for example) ...
SetReport(fmt::format("Failure in {}: foobar was {}\n", __FUNCTION__, foobar));
It's much like the printf() family but with extensibility and type safety built in.
(a) But, unfortunately, not its string interpolation feature (use of f-strings), which has the added advantage of putting the expressions in the string at the place where they're output, something like:
set_report(f"Failure in {__FUNCTION__}: foobar was {foobar}\n");
If fmtlib ever got that capability, I'd probably wet my pants in excitement :-)

Create a C++ string with given format

I'm a Objective-C dev and sometimes I have to deal with C/C++ code.
I have a function written in C++, it logs an event with name, for example, Level_12_Pack_10. I want to create a dynamic C++ string like that, then I can change level and pack numbers.
In Objective C, it's easy with some lines of code: [NSString stringwithformat] but in C++, it's a bit difficult for me.
Could anyone help me do it?
I don't think C++ supports strings with built-in changeable variables like that. It would be too over-the-top to make a class to format the string like that. Probably the closest thing you can get is to use stringstreams:
#include <sstream>
string makeMyString(int level, int pack) {
stringstream ss;
ss << "Level_" << level << "_Pack_" << pack;
return ss.str();
}
If you have a string that you need to read and change the values inside, a similar function could be used.
With c++11, it is drop dead simple just use std::to_string(level) etc to concatenate strings.
int level = 10;
int pack = 40;
std::string stuff = "Level_" + std::to_string(level) + "_Pack_" + std::to_string(pack);
//stuff is now "Level_10_Pack_40"
std::cout << stuff;

printf with std::string?

My understanding is that string is a member of the std namespace, so why does the following occur?
#include <iostream>
int main()
{
using namespace std;
string myString = "Press ENTER to quit program!";
cout << "Come up and C++ me some time." << endl;
printf("Follow this command: %s", myString);
cin.get();
return 0;
}
Each time the program runs, myString prints a seemingly random string of 3 characters, such as in the output above.
C++23 Update
We now finally have std::print as a way to use std::format for output directly:
#include <print>
#include <string>
int main() {
// ...
std::print("Follow this command: {}", myString);
// ...
}
This combines the best of both approaches.
Original Answer
It's compiling because printf isn't type safe, since it uses variable arguments in the C sense1. printf has no option for std::string, only a C-style string. Using something else in place of what it expects definitely won't give you the results you want. It's actually undefined behaviour, so anything at all could happen.
The easiest way to fix this, since you're using C++, is printing it normally with std::cout, since std::string supports that through operator overloading:
std::cout << "Follow this command: " << myString;
If, for some reason, you need to extract the C-style string, you can use the c_str() method of std::string to get a const char * that is null-terminated. Using your example:
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
using namespace std;
string myString = "Press ENTER to quit program!";
cout << "Come up and C++ me some time." << endl;
printf("Follow this command: %s", myString.c_str()); //note the use of c_str
cin.get();
return 0;
}
If you want a function that is like printf, but type safe, look into variadic templates (C++11, supported on all major compilers as of MSVC12). You can find an example of one here. There's nothing I know of implemented like that in the standard library, but there might be in Boost, specifically boost::format.
[1]: This means that you can pass any number of arguments, but the function relies on you to tell it the number and types of those arguments. In the case of printf, that means a string with encoded type information like %d meaning int. If you lie about the type or number, the function has no standard way of knowing, although some compilers have the ability to check and give warnings when you lie.
Please don't use printf("%s", your_string.c_str());
Use cout << your_string; instead. Short, simple and typesafe. In fact, when you're writing C++, you generally want to avoid printf entirely -- it's a leftover from C that's rarely needed or useful in C++.
As to why you should use cout instead of printf, the reasons are numerous. Here's a sampling of a few of the most obvious:
As the question shows, printf isn't type-safe. If the type you pass differs from that given in the conversion specifier, printf will try to use whatever it finds on the stack as if it were the specified type, giving undefined behavior. Some compilers can warn about this under some circumstances, but some compilers can't/won't at all, and none can under all circumstances.
printf isn't extensible. You can only pass primitive types to it. The set of conversion specifiers it understands is hard-coded in its implementation, and there's no way for you to add more/others. Most well-written C++ should use these types primarily to implement types oriented toward the problem being solved.
It makes decent formatting much more difficult. For an obvious example, when you're printing numbers for people to read, you typically want to insert thousands separators every few digits. The exact number of digits and the characters used as separators varies, but cout has that covered as well. For example:
std::locale loc("");
std::cout.imbue(loc);
std::cout << 123456.78;
The nameless locale (the "") picks a locale based on the user's configuration. Therefore, on my machine (configured for US English) this prints out as 123,456.78. For somebody who has their computer configured for (say) Germany, it would print out something like 123.456,78. For somebody with it configured for India, it would print out as 1,23,456.78 (and of course there are many others). With printf I get exactly one result: 123456.78. It is consistent, but it's consistently wrong for everybody everywhere. Essentially the only way to work around it is to do the formatting separately, then pass the result as a string to printf, because printf itself simply will not do the job correctly.
Although they're quite compact, printf format strings can be quite unreadable. Even among C programmers who use printf virtually every day, I'd guess at least 99% would need to look things up to be sure what the # in %#x means, and how that differs from what the # in %#f means (and yes, they mean entirely different things).
use myString.c_str() if you want a c-like string (const char*) to use with printf
thanks
Use std::printf and c_str()
example:
std::printf("Follow this command: %s", myString.c_str());
You can use snprinft to determine the number of characters needed and allocate a buffer of the right size.
int length = std::snprintf(nullptr, 0, "There can only be %i\n", 1 );
char* str = new char[length+1]; // one more character for null terminator
std::snprintf( str, length + 1, "There can only be %i\n", 1 );
std::string cppstr( str );
delete[] str;
This is a minor adaption of an example on cppreference.com
printf accepts a variable number of arguments. Those can only have Plain Old Data (POD) types. Code that passes anything other than POD to printf only compiles because the compiler assumes you got your format right. %s means that the respective argument is supposed to be a pointer to a char. In your case it is an std::string not const char*. printf does not know it because the argument type goes lost and is supposed to be restored from the format parameter. When turning that std::string argument into const char* the resulting pointer will point to some irrelevant region of memory instead of your desired C string. For that reason your code prints out gibberish.
While printf is an excellent choice for printing out formatted text, (especially if you intend to have padding), it can be dangerous if you haven't enabled compiler warnings. Always enable warnings because then mistakes like this are easily avoidable. There is no reason to use the clumsy std::cout mechanism if the printf family can do the same task in a much faster and prettier way. Just make sure you have enabled all warnings (-Wall -Wextra) and you will be good. In case you use your own custom printf implementation you should declare it with the __attribute__ mechanism that enables the compiler to check the format string against the parameters provided.
The main reason is probably that a C++ string is a struct that includes a current-length value, not just the address of a sequence of chars terminated by a 0 byte. Printf and its relatives expect to find such a sequence, not a struct, and therefore get confused by C++ strings.
Speaking for myself, I believe that printf has a place that can't easily be filled by C++ syntactic features, just as table structures in html have a place that can't easily be filled by divs. As Dykstra wrote later about the goto, he didn't intend to start a religion and was really only arguing against using it as a kludge to make up for poorly-designed code.
It would be quite nice if the GNU project would add the printf family to their g++ extensions.
Printf is actually pretty good to use if size matters. Meaning if you are running a program where memory is an issue, then printf is actually a very good and under rater solution. Cout essentially shifts bits over to make room for the string, while printf just takes in some sort of parameters and prints it to the screen. If you were to compile a simple hello world program, printf would be able to compile it in less than 60, 000 bits as opposed to cout, it would take over 1 million bits to compile.
For your situation, id suggest using cout simply because it is much more convenient to use. Although, I would argue that printf is something good to know.
Here’s a generic way of doing it.
#include <string>
#include <stdio.h>
auto print_helper(auto const & t){
return t;
}
auto print_helper(std::string const & s){
return s.c_str();
}
std::string four(){
return "four";
}
template<class ... Args>
void print(char const * fmt, Args&& ...args){
printf(fmt, print_helper(args) ...);
}
int main(){
std::string one {"one"};
char const * three = "three";
print("%c %d %s %s, %s five", 'c', 3+4, one + " two", three, four());
}

Variable Argument list with no named argument?

Is it possible to have a function with variable arguments and no named argument?
For example:
SomeLogClass("Log Message Here %d").Log(5);
SomeLogClass("Log Message Here %d").Error(5);
Take a look at QString's arg methods. Those seem to be something you're looking for.
You can definitely roll your own, although implementation might turn out to be not really trivial, especially if you would like it to support printf format specifiers. If printf style is not necessary, chaining a replace_all kind of calls sounds doable.
Can you write code like that above - yes you can. But you cannot portable write a variadic function without at least one non-variadic parameter. In printf(), for example, this is the format string. In other words, you can write function s like:
int printf( const char * format, ... );
but not:
int printf( ... );
Where I am from we use this:
Log << "LogMessageHere: " << ErrorClass << 5 << whatever << std::endl;
It is not exactly an answer to you question, but it is a solution to your problem, and I think it is more c++ like.
The right answer is no, you can't define only variable arguments, because the mechanism in C/C++ to do so uses a fixed argument in order to compute an address, like this:
void f(int a, ...) {
va_list args;
va_start(args, a); // without a, this macro DOESN'T WORK!!!
}
The answer you flagged gets around it by defaulting the arguments. But what this should teach the newbies is that defaulting the arguments doesn't mean that arguments aren't passed, it means that you don't have to type them.
void f (int a = 0, ...)
So when you call f you can write:
f();
but internally, it's writing f(0)