It depends. There are several buffers in action. Typically (nothing
guaranteed, but certainly the case for Unix and Windows), you'll have to
press enter before your program sees any data; everything you've typed
up to and including enter then goes into a buffer in your process, which
is then discarded when the process terminates.
This is the default behavior, supposing that your process was started
from the command line of a shell, and that standard input is connected
to the keyboard. If another process has started your process, it may
have reconfigured the input to behave differently; it's quite possible
to configure the keyboard (at least under Unix) to send each character
as it is entered, in which case, the next process to read the keyboard
after you've read it will get the extra characters.
Finally, if standard input is from a file, of course, the data in the
file stays where it is, as you'ld expect. If it is from a pipe, at
least on Unix, the data will be discarded, and any processes still
writing to the pipe will receive a signal.