On MSVC 2005, I have the following code.
std::ostringstream stream("initial string ");
stream << 5;
std::cout << stream.str();
What I expect is:
initial string 5
What I get is:
5nitial string
Initializing the stream with a string, I would expect the stream to move its position to the end of the initial string. Obviously, STL doesn't agree with me (not the first time).
What's the purpose of such behavior? Is this use case useful for anything? Also, is there a way to advance the stream position to the end of the initial string?
You can specify the second (optional) parameter of the constructor to set the stream cursor at the end:
To seek to the end, do this:
As to why the write position defaults to the front, I don't know.
Using an
ostringstream
and providing an initial value is just like opening an existing file for writing. You have some data there, and unless you specify otherwise, your initial position will be at the beginning of the data. You can seek in the data, or you specifyios::ate
to initially position the write pointer to the end of the existing data, or you can specifyios::app
to always position the write pointer to the end of the existing data.