Question

I stumbled across this code.

    std::ostringstream str;
    /// (some usage)
    assert( ! str );

What does ostringstream signify when used in a bool context?

Is this possibly an incorrect usage that happens to compile and run?

Was it helpful?

Solution

It tells you if the stream is currently valid. This is something that all streams can do. A file stream, for example, can be invalid if the file was not opened properly.

As a side note, this functionality (testing a stream as a bool) is achieved by overloading explicit operator bool in C++11 and later and by overloading the void* cast operator in versions before C++11.

Here is a link containing some examples of why a stream might fail. This isn't specific to string streams, but it does apply to them.

Edit: changed bool to void* after Martin York pointed out my mistake.

OTHER TIPS

The expression is valid and evaluates the state of the stream. This feature is more commonly used on input streams:

istringstream is;
is.str( "foo" );
int x;
is >> x;

if ( ! is ) {
   cerr << "Conversion failed";
}

I'm not sure how any of the standard streaming functions could cause an ostringstream to go bad, but you could certainly write one yourself.

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