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CS253 To String
- The to_string() functions are declared in <string>.
- They convert any numeric type to a string.
- They’re overloaded for all numeric types: int, double, etc.
- They work even if you don’t know exactly what type the number is,
such as size_t or time_t.
- Unlike Java, non-numeric types don’t work.
Example
string s;
s += ' ' + to_string(false); // bool
s += ' ' + to_string('1'); // char
s += ' ' + to_string(short(2)); // short
s += ' ' + to_string(static_cast<unsigned short>(3)); // unsigned short
s += ' ' + to_string(4); // int
s += ' ' + to_string(5U); // unsigned int
s += ' ' + to_string(6L); // long
s += ' ' + to_string(7UL); // unsigned long
s += ' ' + to_string(8LL); // long long
s += ' ' + to_string(9ULL); // unsigned long long
s += ' ' + to_string(10.11F); // float
s += ' ' + to_string(12.13); // double
s += ' ' + to_string(14.15L); // long double
cout << s << '\n';
0 49 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10.110000 12.130000 14.150000
There’s no way to write short constants. 🤷
The old way
Before to_string(), error messages had to be created
via a stringstream:
void foo(int n, int min, int max) {
if (n < min || n > max) {
ostringstream oss;
oss << "Bad value " << n << ", must be "
<< min << "–" << max;
throw range_error(oss.str());
}
}
int main() {
try {
foo(12, 1, 10);
}
catch (const exception &e) {
cerr << "OOPS: " << e.what() << '\n';
}
}
OOPS: Bad value 12, must be 1–10
The new way
Now, error messages can be created via a to_string():
void foo(int n, int min, int max) {
if (n < min || n > max)
throw range_error(
"Bad value " + to_string(n) + ", must be "
+ to_string(min) + "–" + to_string(max));
}
int main() {
try {
foo(12, 1, 10);
}
catch (const exception &e) {
cerr << "OOPS: " << e.what() << '\n';
}
}
OOPS: Bad value 12, must be 1–10
Better? You decide. It’s fewer lines of code, and no objects.