In Short
You will have a problem with cout, if you don't put a linebreak at it's end!
In Detail
Try adding an endl
to your cout
(e.g. std::cout << data << std::endl
), or use following instruction to activate "immediate output" for cout (without it needing a linebreak first).
std::cout << std::unitbuf;
Complete example:
std::cout << std::unitbuf;
std::cout << data;
// ... a lot of code later ...
std::cout << "it still works";
Sidenote: this has to do with output buffering, as the name unitbuf
suggests (if you want to look up what is really happening here).
This way it is also possible to rewrite the current line, which is a good example, where you would need this ;-)
Practical example
using namespace std;
cout << "I'm about to calculate some great stuff!" << endl;
cout << unitbuf;
for (int x=0; x<=100; x++)
{
cout << "\r" << x << " percent finished!";
// Calculate great stuff here
// ...
sleep(100); // or just pretend, and rest a little ;-)
}
cout << endl << "Finished calculating awesome stuff!" << endl;
Remarks:
- \r (carriage return) puts the curser to the first position of the line (without linebreaking)
- If you write shorter text in a previously written line, make sure you overwrite it with space chars at the end
Output somewhere in the process:
I'm about to calculate some great stuff!
45 percent finished!
.. and some time later:
I'm about to calculate some great stuff!
100 percent finished!
Finished calculating awesome stuff!
printf("%s \n", data);
works... something's wrong if data is a string.data
and how are you initializing it (just sayingmov data, EDX
is not nearly enough... I'm very inclined to downvote the question. If you want help, you need to provide more info.