42

How do you check to see if the user didn't input anything at a cin command and simply pressed enter?

1
  • 1
    Read a line and count how many characters?
    – Anon.
    Feb 15, 2011 at 3:36

4 Answers 4

63

When reading from std::cin, it's preferable not to use the stream extraction operator >> as this can have all sorts of nasty side effects. For example, if you have this code:

std::string name;
std::cin >> name;

And I enter John Doe, then the line to read from cin will just hold the value John, leaving Doe behind to be read by some future read operation. Similarly, if I were to write:

int myInteger;
std::cin >> myInteger;

And I then type in John Doe, then cin will enter an error state and will refuse to do any future read operations until you explicitly clear its error state and flush the characters that caused the error.

A better way to do user input is to use std::getline to read characters from the keyboard until the user hits enter. For example:

std::string name;
getline(std::cin, name); // getline doesn't need the std:: prefix here because C++ has ADL.

ADL stands for argument-dependent lookup. Now, if I enter John Doe, the value of name will be John Doe and there won't be any data left around in cin. Moreover, this also lets you test if the user just hit enter:

std::string name;
getline(std::cin, name);

if (name.empty()) {
    /* ... nothing entered ... */
}

The drawback of using this approach is that if you want to read in a formatted data line, an int or a double you'll have to parse the representation out of the string. I personally think this is worth it because it gives you a more fine-grained control of what to do if the user enters something invalid and "guards" cin from ever entering a fail state.

I teach a C++ programming course, and have some lecture notes about the streams library that goes into a fair amount of detail about how to read formatted data from cin in a safe way (mostly at the end of the chapter). I'm not sure how useful you'll find this, but in case it's helpful I thought I'd post the link.

Hope this helps!

1
  • Thank you for this answer, it really helped me out with a program I'm working on. I'm putting in this comment because I found something interesting. I have an if-else statement that checks if the user inputs "y", "n", something else, or nothing at all. I found that the program won't hit the "nothing at all" case unless I start the if-else with that case. I'm not sure if that also happened to other people. Mar 22, 2011 at 21:47
4

cin will not continue with the program unless the user enters at least 1 character (enter doesn't count). If the user doesn't give ANY input, cin will just keep waiting for the user to give input and then press enter.

3
  • 1
    Almost true; depends what operation you do with cin.
    – Fred Nurk
    Feb 15, 2011 at 3:53
  • @Fred-Nurk - Can you give me an example?
    – matzahboy
    Feb 15, 2011 at 4:41
  • Getline was mentioned in another answer, but cin.get and cin.ignore are others.
    – Fred Nurk
    Feb 15, 2011 at 6:59
-6

The Simple way >>

{
char X=0; //  ASCII( 0 ) means a NULL value
cin>>X;
if(X==0 || X==10) // ASCII( 10 ) means ENTER
cout<<"User din't enter ANYTHING !! ";
}

But a simple problem is....

cin just won't allow you to move further without entering a character

by character here i mean a DIGIT or alphabet or special symbol , not space, enter null etc

Hope this solves your problem, if it doesn't, I'll be glad to help just let me know.

-7
int main(){ 
string str[100];
std::cout<<"Hello how are you ? \n";
std::cin>>str;
if(str.length() > 0){
// If input is seen
}
else{
// If input is not seen
}
}

Any problem let me know.

6
  • I dont have compiler so I cant check. but thanks for telling me. Feb 15, 2011 at 3:52
  • Istreams do not have an extractor for a string pointer (your str is an array of strings). You can always use an online compiler to check.
    – Fred Nurk
    Feb 15, 2011 at 3:54
  • Also, you are allocating 100 strings. You probably meant char[100].
    – Marlon
    Feb 15, 2011 at 3:55
  • @Marlon: Hopefully he meant string str;, but with yours or mine, it still has problems.
    – Fred Nurk
    Feb 15, 2011 at 4:01
  • 6
    Why are you just making stuff up? Feb 15, 2011 at 6:49

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.