Difference between wcin and cin
cin
users char
(narrow character) as character type. It can be used for ASCII and ANSI characters.
For internationalization, we need Unicode strings which do not fit in char
. wcin
uses wchar_t
(wide character) and is usable for Unicode characters.
wcin declaration
extern wistream wcin;
It is defined in <iostream> header file.
The wcin
object is ensured to be initialized during or before the first time an object of type ios_base::Init
is constructed. After the wcin
object is constructed, wcin.tie()
returns &wcout
which means that any formatted input operation on wcout.flush()
if any characters are pending for output.
The "wc" in wcin
refers to "wide character" and 'in' means "input", hence wcin
means "wide character input". The wcin
object is used along with the extraction operator (>>) in order to receive a stream of characters. The general syntax is:
wcin >> varName;
The extraction operator can be used more than once to accept multiple inputs as:
wcin >> var1 >> var2 >> … >> varN;
The wcin
object can also be used with other member functions such as getline(), read()
, etc. Some of the commonly used member functions are:
wcin.get(wchar_t &ch):
Reads an wide character and store it in ch.wcin.getline(wchar_t *buffer, int length):
Reads a stream of wide characters into the string buffer, It stops when- it has read length-1 characters or
- when it finds an end-of-line character ('\n') or the end of the file.
wcin.read(wchar_t *buffer, int n):
Reads n bytes (or until the end of the file) from the stream into the buffer.wcin.ignore(int n):
Ignores the next n characters from the input stream.wcin.eof():
Returns a nonzero value if the end of file (eof) is reached.
Example 1: wcin with extraction operator:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
wchar_t word[20];
wcout << L"Enter a word: ";
wcin >> word;
wcout << word;
return 0;
}
When you run the program, a possible output will be:
Enter a word: kathmandu kathmandu
Example 2: wcin with member function:
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
wchar_t str[50], ch;
wcout << L"Enter a string: ";
wcin.getline(str, 20);
wcout << L"Enter a character: ";
wcin.get(ch);
wcout << L"String = " << str << endl;
wcout << L"Character = " << ch << endl;
return 0;
}
When you run the program, a possible output will be:
Enter a string: program using wcin Enter a character: h String = program using wcin Character = h
Be careful
char16_t
and char32_t
, which were introduced in C++11 are recommended to be used instead of wchar_t
because wchar_t
is 16 bit on some systems and 32 bit on some other. This makes it difficult to port.
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