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I have to read input according to these rules:

"The input consists of several lines of text. Some lines may be empty. The input can be fed from a file, using a line such as prog.exe < input.txt in which case the end of input is indicated appropriatelly by the operating system. If you enter input using a keyboard, there is normally a way to signal the end of input with some control key, depending on the operating system (e.g., Ctrl+d in Unix/Linux-style systems, and Ctrl+z in Microsoft systems)."

Previously I have been doing it this way

while(getline(cin, data)) {
     if(data == "0") break;
     / * do stuff */
}

So I can read as many lines as I want and preform calculations, and then when I'm done just type a 0 and end my program. I tried entering a list of things in a .txt file one per line, and then calling program.exe < myfile.txt but nothing happened.

What's this < file.txt doing?

How can I properly handle content inside it when calling my program like that?

And how can I make it calculate things when you hit ctrl+z?

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  • If, for example, in Windows, you issue the command dir, it will list the contents of the current directory. Issuing dir > thisDir.txt will redirect the output to the specified text file. This logic can be used to answer part of your question.
    – chris
    Apr 28, 2012 at 1:13

2 Answers 2

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Paraphrasing the text of your exercise:

Using command1 < file1 executes command1, with file1 as the source of input (as opposed to the keyboard).

This is known as redirecting standard input.

std::cin will get its input from file1 instead of from the keyboard.

The end of the input file is analogous to CTRL+Z (on Microsoft systems, CTRL+D on most others). Once std::getline() reaches the end of the file (or you read a line with just "0"), you'll exit your while-loop and then you can do your calculation on the data you've collected (and presumably stored in some container).

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Since it sounds like homework...

Hint 1: >, <, <<, >> are "input/output redirect" for shell (CMD on Windows).

Hint 2: getline returns result (RTFM i.e. http://linux.die.net/man/3/getline if you would use C version or for C++ http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/string/getline/ and corresponding istream methods)

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  • 2
    No, he's clearly calling getline(istream&, string&), not getline(char**, size_t*, FILE*), so it doesn't return the result, it just returns cin.
    – abarnert
    Apr 28, 2012 at 1:28
  • @AlexeiLevenkov: Yes, the C-style comments do conflict with the C++ tag.
    – johnsyweb
    Apr 28, 2012 at 2:02

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