std::getchar
From cppreference.com
Defined in header <cstdio>
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int getchar(); |
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Reads the next character from stdin.
Equivalent to std::getc(stdin).
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[edit] Parameters
(none)
[edit] Return value
The obtained character on success or EOF on failure.
If the failure has been caused by end of file condition, additionally sets the eof indicator (see std::feof()) on stdin. If the failure has been caused by some other error, sets the error indicator (see std::ferror()) on stdin.
[edit] Example
std::getchar
with error checking. Exit program by entering ESC char.
#include <cctype> #include <cstdio> #include <cstdlib> #include <iomanip> #include <iostream> int main() { for (int ch; (ch = std::getchar()) != EOF ;) // read/print "abc" from stdin { if (std::isprint(ch)) std::cout << static_cast<char>(ch) << '\n'; if (ch == 27) // 'ESC' (escape) in ASCII return EXIT_SUCCESS; } // Test reason for reaching EOF. if (std::feof(stdin)) // if failure caused by end-of-file condition std::cout << "End of file reached\n"; else if (std::ferror(stdin)) // if failure caused by some other error { std::perror("getchar()"); std::cerr << "getchar() failed in file " << std::quoted(__FILE__) << " at line # " << __LINE__ - 14 << '\n'; std::exit(EXIT_FAILURE); } return EXIT_SUCCESS; }
Possible output:
abc a b c ^[
[edit] See also
gets a character from a file stream (function) | |
C documentation for getchar
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