Reputation: 305
I was looking for solutions to appending strings with other primitives and found that stringstream was the easiest solution. However, I wanted to streamline the process so I wanted to make a function to ease its use. In case you are proposing alternate methods for concatenation, i need the final result to be char*. I used a loop (i) with:
std::stringstream ss;
ss << "test" << i;
char* name = new char[ss.str().size() + 1];//allocate
strcpy(name, ss.str().c_str());//copy and put (char*)c_str in name
So the output is something link test1test2test3... This was the most reasonable solution I could muster. I was trying to put it into a function for ease of use, but am running into problems. I wanted to do something like:
char* string_to_pointer( char* dest, std::stringstream* _ss ) {
char* result = new char[_ss->str().size() + 1];
strcpy(result, _ss->str().c_str());
return result;
}
I could then do something like:
std::stringstream ss;
ss << "test" << i;
char* name = string_to_pointer( name, &ss );
I'm pretty new to c++ and this seems like the correct use syntactically, but I am running into runtime issues and would welcome solutions on how to get this in an easy to use function without resulting to Boost.
Upvotes: 1
Views: 2314
Reputation: 821
What about something like this:
#include <string>
#include <sstream>
class ToString {
std::ostringstream stream;
public:
template<typename T>
inline ToString &operator<<(const T&val) {
stream << val;
return *this;
}
inline operator std::string() const {
return stream.str();
}
};
You can use it like this:
std::string str = ToString() << "Test " << 5 << " and " << 4.2;
Upvotes: 2
Reputation: 11482
Use the std::stringstream::str()
function to retrieve the contents of the string.
Example:
int foo = 42;
double bar = 12.67;
std::stringstream ss;
ss << "foo bar - " << foo << ' ' << bar;
std::string result = ss.str();
If you dont want to modify the string further, you can now simple call result.c_str()
to acquire a const char*
. However, if you really need a modifyable char*
you have to copy the contents of the string to a cstring:
std::unique_ptr<char[]> cstring = new char[result.size() + 1];
strcpy(cstring.get(), result.c_str());
Upvotes: 0
Reputation: 693
char* string_to_cstring ( const std::string &_ss )
Would be cleaner! Use with string_to_cstring(ss.str())
Need the returned C-String to be changeble? Because if not, just use ss.str().c_str()
wherever you need it!
Or use:
char* result = new char[ss.str().size() + 1] (); // value initialized
ss.str().copy(result,std::string::npos);
Upvotes: 0