When we use typeid i.e typeid(variable).name() Does it give out string as the output because if it does it could be helpful in comparisons with strings.
3 Answers
According to the standard, it is an implementation-defined null-terminated const char*
:
18.7.1 Class type_info
....
const char* name() const noexcept;
Returns: An implementation-defined
NTBS
.Remarks: The message may be a null-terminated multibyte string (17.5.2.1.4.2), suitable for conversion and display as a
wstring
(21.3, 22.4.1.4)
Since the content is implementation-defined, it cannot be compared with other strings in a reliable way, unless we restrict ourselves to specific implementations.
typeid(variable).name()
returns a pointer a null terminated string, which can be compared using strcmp()
. However a better way to check a type of variable is
if (typeid(a) == typeid(int))
-
Even for a User defined data type, we can use this right? typeid(a) == typeid(class) where a is an object of class.– x86-64Dec 1, 2015 at 21:28
I'm getting Ss when I try this.
#include <string>
#include <typeinfo>
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main(int argc, char** argv) {
string str = "string";
cout << typeid(str).name();
return 0;
}
Try it: http://cpp.sh/4lsw
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Interesting... But it doesn't seem relevant. Thanks anyway though, that's a good puzzler why it's giving Ss... 🤔 Mar 23, 2022 at 2:57