Everything you cout
gets outputted. It's just that a terminal will interpret '\b'
as "go back one character"
. Try redirecting the output to a file and examine it with a (hex)editor to see that all the characters (including '\b'
) are there.
At a first glance, one might think that terminals print output as-is. That's incorrect, though. Terminals change the way they behave whenever they encounter one of special terminal control sequences or characters. The '\b'
(=0x08
=backspace) character is one of those. More can be found at http://ascii-table.com/ansi-escape-sequences.php . You can try printing some of those to a terminal and see it change colors, rewrite current lines and so on and so forth. In fact, you can use these special sequences and characters to make complete GUI-like apps in the command-line.
Note however, that not with all programs you can rely on the "redirect to a file"
trick to see what terminal control sequences they write to stdout. Many programs detect whether they're writing to a terminal or not and adjust their usage (or lack thereof) of terminal control sequences accordingly.
system()
requiresstdlib.h
orcstdlib
\b
, how is this even a question then?