views:

305

answers:

2

Hi, how do I check for end-of-file using the string::getline function? Coz, using .eof() is not recommended as it wont signal eof until I attempt to read beyond eof.

+3  A: 

Just read and then check that the read operation succeeded:

 std::getline(std::cin, str);
 if(!std::cin)
 {
     std::cout << "failure\n";
 }

Since the failure may be due to a number of causes, you can use the eof member function to see it what happened was actually EOF:

 std::getline(std::cin, str);
 if(!std::cin)
 {
     if(std::cin.eof())
         std::cout << "EOF\n";
     else
         std::cout << "other failure\n";
 }

getline returns the stream so you can write more compactly:

 if(!std::getline(std::cin, str))
Manuel
+2  A: 

The canonical reading look in C++ is:

while (getline(cin, str)) {

}

if (cin.bad()) {
    // IO error
} else if (!cin.eof()) {
    // format error (not possible with getline but possible with operator>>)
} else {
    // format error (not possible with getline but possible with operator>>)
    // or end of file (can't make the difference)
}
AProgrammer