In c, I can use newline delimeter ([^\n]) with scanf. Using which I can store the line. Similarly for cin, I can use getline.

If I have to store a paragraph, I can simulate the functionality using my own special char delimiter like [^#] or [^\t] with scanf function in c.

char a[30];
scanf("%[^\#]",a);
printf("%s",a);

How to achieve the similar functionality with cin object in cpp.

Thanks for your time.

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getline takes an optional third argument for a delimiter (which defaults to '\n') – Foo Bah Sep 4 '11 at 5:46
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1 Answer

up vote 6 down vote accepted

istream.getline lets you specify a deliminator to use instead of the default '\n':

cin.getline (char* s, streamsize n, char delim );

or the safer and easier way is to use std::getline. With this method you don't have to worry about allocating a buffer large enough to fit your text.

string s;
getline(cin, s, '\t');

EDIT:

Just as a side note since it sounds like you are just learning c++ the proper way to read multiple deliminated lines is:

string s;
while(getline(cin, s, '\t')){
    // Do something with the line
}
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Thanks a lot GWW for your help. I was not aware of this. :-) I tested this and it helped. – CppLearner Sep 4 '11 at 5:49
Yes indeed I am learning c++. Thanks for the side note. I will keep that in mind. – CppLearner Sep 4 '11 at 5:59
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