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I am making it so it adds, multiples, subtracts, and divides. I am running it through my command prompt and I dont know how to make it so there is a space between each calculation. Or Even if I can get them on separate lines. But just a space would be fine.

#include <iostream> //io from console

int main() //app entry point 
{ 


  int num1;  //first variabe
  int num2; //second variable
  int sum; //sum of 2 variabes
  int product; //product of 2 variabes
  int difference; //differencr of 2 variabes
  int quotient; //quotient of 2 variabe

  std::cout << "Enter first number:  "; //prompt user for input
  std::cin >> num1; //assigns input to num1

  std::cout << "Enter second number  "; //prompt user for input
  std::cin >> num2; //assigns inout to num2

  sum = num1 + num2; //calcs the sum
  std::cout << "The sum is      "     <<  sum;   //displays the sum

  product = num1 * num2; //calcs the product
  std::cout << "  The product is     " <<     product;   //displays the product

  difference = num1 - num2; //calcs the product
  std::cout << "  The difference is     "   <<  difference;   //displays the        difference

  quotient = num1 / num2; //calcs the quotient
  std::cout << "  The quotient is   "    <<  quotient;   //displays the quotient

}
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4 Answers 4

4

Put this between each line or at the end of your lines or in the string you are printing.

std::cout << "\n";

Or add << endl; at the end of each output line.

Added example for you below with the \n.


       #include <iostream> //io from console

       int main() //app entry point 
       { 


    int num1;  //first variabe
    int num2; //second variable
    int sum; //sum of 2 variabes
    int product; //product of 2 variabes
    int difference; //differencr of 2 variabes
    int quotient; //quotient of 2 variabe

    std::cout << "\nEnter first number:  "; //prompt user for input
    std::cin >> num1; //assigns input to num1

    std::cout << "\nEnter second number  "; //prompt user for input
    std::cin >> num2; //assigns inout to num2

    sum = num1 + num2; //calcs the sum
    std::cout << "\nThe sum is      "     <<  sum;   //displays the sum

    product = num1 * num2; //calcs the product
    std::cout << "\n  The product is     " <<     product;   //displays the product

    difference = num1 - num2; //calcs the product
    std::cout << "\n  The difference is     "   <<  difference;   //displays the        difference

    quotient = num1 / num2; //calcs the quotient
    std::cout << "\n  The quotient is   "    <<  quotient;   //displays the quotient

}
5
  • 1
    Note that "\n" and std::endl are almost interchangeable. Use endl if you will be mixing input and output, "\n" otherwise. Jan 10, 2012 at 21:38
  • 1
    @Mark : Why recommend endl at all here? The standard already guarantees that standard output will be flushed before attempting to read from standard input. Meanwhile, encouraging new programmers to use endl when they really just need a newline implants bad habits.
    – ildjarn
    Jan 10, 2012 at 21:39
  • @ildjarn: suggested both as options. Not one as a 'standard'.
    – prolink007
    Jan 10, 2012 at 21:40
  • @ildjarn you're probably right. Is endl only useful if you're expecting a visible wait between lines of output? Jan 10, 2012 at 21:42
  • 1
    @Mark : As far as using cout specifically, that's exactly right. And for writing to file streams, you rarely want to flush manually (except for logging purposes), as that will kill performance. My overall thoughts on endl are summed up in this answer and its comments.
    – ildjarn
    Jan 10, 2012 at 21:44
2

You can move the cursor to the following line like so:

std::cout << "\n";
std::cout << std::endl;

The endl option will force the stream to flush, as well.

Your code might then look like:

product = num1 * num2;
difference = num1 - num2;

std::cout << "  The product is:   " << product << "\n";
std::cout << "  The difference is " << difference << std::endl;
1

You can use:

std::cout << std::endl;

to add new lines

0

Add << std::endl to output a new line character each time.

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