You're developing the console yourself, so this should be no big problem.
The console is basically a set of text lines that are being rendered. User input is echoed so the user sees wha he's typing. This means that the last line of the console is special, it is the "editable input buffer". All other lines are output. When the user hits Enter
, you execute the edit buffer. Step 1 in executing is making a private copy of the edit buffer, step 2 is clearing the edit buffer, and step 3 is copying the private copy to output.
Hence, at any moment there's only one partial line and it only changes by user input. All other lines are complete, and change on a line-by-line basis. Your program logging happens between two user inputs and therefore gets itws own line. In a multi-threaded program, this means the "Console::AddLine" function will need an internal mutex (CriticalSection for Win32).