Is it possible to capture cout in a way so that every standard output (cout << "example";
) automatically calls a function (myfunc("example");
)?
2 Answers
One way would be to create a class which had the appropriate operator<<
overloads and create a global instance called cout
and to using std::whatever
instead of using namespace std;
. It would then be easy enough to switch back and forth from your custom cout
to std::cout
.
That's just one solution though (which may require a decent amount of work, more than you want to spend), I'm sure other people know better ways.
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Thanks for the idea, that's probably the best approach and there is a working code sample in "Override c++ streams" (thanks @Tomalak Geret'kal for the link). I'll keep using namespace std though and call my stringstream something else.– basic6Aug 27, 2011 at 20:55
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@basic6 ok, so you'd have something like
MyStream sout;
and everything would besout << stuff;
. And then when you wanted to change back tocout
you chould changeMyStream sout;
toostream& sout = cout;
and then it'd be likecout
again. Will you mark this as the answer if it's answered your question? Aug 27, 2011 at 22:49
What you need to do is make a new class inherited from std::streambuf
and overload the virtual function virtual int overflow(int c);
. You then need to use rdbuf()
on cout
to this class.
After you connect it up to cout
the overflow()
will be called with every character output.
Example:
#include <iostream>
#include <stdio.h>
class MyCOutClass: public std::streambuf
{
private:
virtual int overflow(int c)
{
if (c == EOF)
{
return !EOF;
}
else
{
if(c=='\n')
printf("\r");
printf("%c",c);
return c;
}
}
};
class MyCOutClass MyCOut;
int main(void)
{
std::cout.rdbuf(&MyCOut);
std::cout << "testing" << std::endl;
return 0;
}