Normally I live in my guarded world of C#. But sometimes I have to break out and do something outside.
At the moment I have to decode an audiostream and have to output this directly in my c++ console application.
If I write the content into a file, I can hear the correct result. But if I use instead of a fstream cout, I get only a noisy sound.
How I have to do it correct? Here the working filestream code:
fstream wavefile;
wavefile.open(output, ios::out | ios::binary | ios::trunc);
//do something
wavefile.write((char*) &waveheader, waveheadersize);
//do something else
do {
//do something
//decodedBuffer is of type BYTE* , decodedLength is of type DWORD
wavefile.write((char*) decodedBuffer, decodedLength);
wavefile.flush();
} while (encodedLength > 0);
My not working cout code:
std::cout.setf(ios::out | ios::binary | ios::trunc);
//do something
//this works, I got the same output
cout << structToString(&waveheader) << endl;
//do something else
do {
//do something
cout << (char *)decodedBuffer;
} while (encodedLength > 0);
Thanks in advance
std::cout
to a file and compareios::out
,ios::binary
andios::trunc
are formatting-flags. See en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/io/ios_base/setfcout << (char *)decodedBuffer
invokes the formatted output inserter. You knowstd::cout
still has awrite
method, right? It behaves as an unformatted output function, which is likely what you want (and in fact used in yourstd::fstream
write operation usingstd::basic_ostream::write
).