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The following code doesn't give the second prompt to "enter message". How do I fix it?

cout << "Enter shifts:" << endl;
cin >> shifts;
cout << "Enter message:" << endl;
getline(cin, msg);
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2 Answers 2

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try this one

cout << "Enter shifts:" << endl;
cin >> shifts;
cout << "Enter message:" << endl;
cin.ignore();
getline(cin, msg);

use cin.ignore(); before using getline anywhere.

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  • Thanks! it worked. But do I always have to manually flush the buffer?
    – ANKI_YUME
    Jul 12, 2015 at 3:32
  • Is cin.ignore() similar to cin >> ws? I think I'd probably use the latter in this case. Jul 12, 2015 at 3:53
  • @ANKI_YUME, maybe you could also opt for creating a function that wraps both calls and have it return your input by value, which may get elided by NRVO if its a larger type, or take a reference and input it directly to that, similar to what std::getline does.
    – Alejandro
    Jul 12, 2015 at 14:15
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when you enter shifts there is a newline which read by geline funtion. So You need to ignore that newline.

write :

cout << "Enter shifts:" << endl;
cin >> shifts;
getchar();
cout << "Enter message:" << endl;
getline(cin, msg);

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