5

well basically it should list all the vector coords in this kind of format :

(x, y, z)

but at the moment it does like this (x, y, z, )

easiest way would be using if in the for cycle, but can i substract a small piece of string from the out variable?

my code:

    template <unsigned short m>
    std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& out, const Vector<m>& v) {
    out << "(";
    for(int i = 0; i < m; i++) {
        out << v.coords[i] << ", ";
    }
    out << ")";
    return out;
}
2
  • Why is the if statement not an option, just curious?
    – jonsca
    Mar 13, 2011 at 9:18
  • I suppose Jaanus is trying to make the loop tighter for performance reasons. In this case it's not worth it though, the time spent doing the IO will far out weigh the time spending testing the loop index. It would be interesting to see if the compiler can optimize out the test in any case. May 26, 2011 at 16:20

5 Answers 5

21

This is from an old code base of mine. On the upside: it comes with unit tests:

Updated for modern times, more generic and self contained Live On Coliru

/*! note: delimiter cannot contain NUL characters
 */
template <typename Range, typename Value = typename Range::value_type>
std::string Join(Range const& elements, const char *const delimiter) {
    std::ostringstream os;
    auto b = begin(elements), e = end(elements);

    if (b != e) {
        std::copy(b, prev(e), std::ostream_iterator<Value>(os, delimiter));
        b = prev(e);
    }
    if (b != e) {
        os << *b;
    }

    return os.str();
}

/*! note: imput is assumed to not contain NUL characters
 */
template <typename Input, typename Output, typename Value = typename Output::value_type>
void Split(char delimiter, Output &output, Input const& input) {
    using namespace std;
    for (auto cur = begin(input), beg = cur; ; ++cur) {
        if (cur == end(input) || *cur == delimiter || !*cur) {
            output.insert(output.end(), Value(beg, cur));
            if (cur == end(input) || !*cur)
                break;
            else
                beg = next(cur);
        }
    }
}

And some corresponding unit test cases:

void testSplit() {
    std::vector<std::string> res;
    const std::string test = "a test ,string, to,,,be, split,\"up,up\",";
    TextUtils::Split(',', res, test);

    UT_EQUAL(10u, res.size());
    UT_EQUAL("a test ", res[0]);
    UT_EQUAL("string", res[1]);
    UT_EQUAL(" to", res[2]);
    UT_EQUAL("", res[3]);
    UT_EQUAL("", res[4]);
    UT_EQUAL("be", res[5]);
    UT_EQUAL(" split", res[6]);
    UT_EQUAL("\"up", res[7]); // Thus making 'split' unusable for parsing
    UT_EQUAL("up\"", res[8]); //  csv files...
    UT_EQUAL("", res[9]);

    TextUtils::Split('.', res, "dossier_id");
    UT_EQUAL(11u, res.size());

    res.clear();
    UT_EQUAL(0u, res.size());

    TextUtils::Split('.', res, "dossier_id");
    UT_EQUAL(1u, res.size());
    std::string UseName = res[res.size() - 1];
    UT_EQUAL("dossier_id", UseName);
}

void testJoin() {
    std::string elements[] = { "aap", "noot", "mies" };

    typedef std::vector<std::string> strings;

    UT_EQUAL(""               , TextUtils::Join(strings(), ""));
    UT_EQUAL(""               , TextUtils::Join(strings(), "bla"));
    UT_EQUAL("aap"            , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 1), ""));
    UT_EQUAL("aap"            , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 1), "#"));
    UT_EQUAL("aap"            , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 1), "##"));
    UT_EQUAL("aapnoot"        , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 2), ""));
    UT_EQUAL("aap#noot"       , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 2), "#"));
    UT_EQUAL("aap##noot"      , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 2), "##"));
    UT_EQUAL("aapnootmies"    , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 3), ""));
    UT_EQUAL("aap#noot#mies"  , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 3), "#"));
    UT_EQUAL("aap##noot##mies", TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 3), "##"));
    UT_EQUAL("aap  noot  mies", TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 3), "  "));

    UT_EQUAL("aapnootmies"    , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 3), "\0"));
    UT_EQUAL("aapnootmies"    , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 3), std::string("\0" , 1).c_str()));
    UT_EQUAL("aapnootmies"    , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 3), std::string("\0+", 2).c_str()));
    UT_EQUAL("aap+noot+mies"  , TextUtils::Join(strings(elements, elements + 3), std::string("+\0", 2).c_str()));
}

See it Live On Coliru

6
  • Works flawlessly. Super awesome. Thanks.
    – Yash
    Aug 22, 2015 at 14:46
  • added is an unused var
    – Ian
    Jan 13, 2019 at 17:44
  • @Ian Oh my. That's a long time ago. Good spot, and none of that code would pass my own code review today. I updated the answer to be a little bit better :)
    – sehe
    Jan 13, 2019 at 21:22
  • Please don't rewrite answers so substantially so much later, but rather post a new answer. It's not fair on the 15 people who voted on the old version! Jan 13, 2019 at 23:00
  • @LightnessRacesinOrbit in fairness they did so in the past, when the answer was slightly less outdated as well. And in my defense, I made sure all the test cases still pass (and you can now easily verify this, as opposed to the old situation). Cheers :)
    – sehe
    Jan 14, 2019 at 0:21
5

Use an if statement to add the comma

for(int i = 0;i<m;i++)
{
  out<<V.coords[i];

  if(i !=m-1)
     out<<",";

}
3

That isn't possible. Another possibility: moving out of the loop the output of the first or the last coordinates. Then there is no need of an if (or the operator ?:) inside the loop, but handling an empty vector is more complex as it will need an if outside the loop.

2

Loop from i to m-1 printing the value and a comma, then at the end of the loop (where you print out the ")"), print out the last element without a comma

0

How about this one:

template <unsigned short m>
std::ostream& operator<<(std::ostream& out, const Vector<m>& v) {
   std::string sep;
   out << "(";
   for(int i = 0; i < m; i++) {
      out << sep << v.coords[i];
      sep = ", ";
   }
   out << ")";
   return out;
}

You get no if conditions, but at small extra cost of using string reassignments.

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