std::num_put
Defined in header
<locale>
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template<
class CharT, |
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Class std::num_put
encapsulates the rules for formatting numeric values as strings. Specifically, the types bool, long, unsigned long, long long, unsigned long long, double, long double, void*, and of all types implicitly convertible to these (such as int or float) are supported. The standard formatting output operators (such as cout << n;) use the std::num_put
facet of the I/O stream's locale to generate text representation of numbers.
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[edit] Type requirements
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OutputIt must meet the requirements of OutputIterator .
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[edit] Specializations
Two standalone (locale-independent) full specializations and two partial specializations are provided by the standard library:
Defined in header
<locale> |
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std::num_put<char> | creates narrow string representations of numbers |
std::num_put<wchar_t> | creates wide string representations of numbers |
std::num_put<char, OutputIt> | creates narrow string representations of numbers using custom output iterator |
std::num_put<wchar_t, OutputIt> | creates wide string representations of numbers using custom output iterator |
In addition, every locale object constructed in a C++ program implements its own (locale-specific) versions of these specializations.
[edit] Member types
Member type | Definition |
char_type
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CharT
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iter_type
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OutputIt
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[edit] Member functions
constructs a new num_put facet (public member function) |
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destructs a num_put facet (protected member function) |
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invokes do_put (public member function) |
[edit] Protected member functions
[virtual]
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formats a number and writes to output stream (virtual protected member function) |
[edit] Member objects
static std::locale::id id |
id of the locale (public member object) |
[edit] Example
#include <iostream> #include <locale> #include <string> #include <iterator> int main() { double n = 1234567.89; std::cout.imbue(std::locale("de_DE")); std::cout << "Direct conversion to string:\n" << std::to_string(n) << '\n' << "Output using a german locale:\n" << std::fixed << n << '\n' << "Output using an american locale:\n"; // use the facet directly std::cout.imbue(std::locale("en_US.UTF-8")); auto& f = std::use_facet<std::num_put<char>>(std::cout.getloc()); f.put(std::ostreambuf_iterator<char>(std::cout), std::cout, ' ', n); std::cout << '\n'; }
Output:
Direct conversion to string: 1234567.890000 Output using a german locale: 1.234.567,890000 Output using an american locale: 1,234,567.890000
[edit] See also
defines numeric punctuation rules (class template) |
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parses numeric values from an input character sequence (class template) |
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(C++11)
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converts an integral or floating point value to string (function) |
(C++11)
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converts an integral or floating point value to wstring (function) |