40

(a)

string str = "Hello\nWorld";

When I print str, the output is:

Hello
World

(b)

string str;
cin >> str;      //given input as Hello\nWorld

When I print str, the output is:

Hello\nWorld

What is the difference between (a) and (b)?

2

7 Answers 7

58

The C++ compiler has certain rules when control characters are provided - documentation. As you can see, when you specify \n in a string literal it is replaced by the compiler with a line feed (value 0xa for ASCII). So instead of 2 symbols, \ and n, you get one symbol with binary code 0xa (I assume you use ASCII encoding), which makes the console move output to a new line when printed. When you read a string the compiler is not involved and your string has the actual symbols \ and n in it.

9
  • 8
    Exactly right. The escape codes are a feature of the source code parser, not a feature of the C++ string data. Aug 15, 2018 at 23:02
  • 2
    The language definition does not require any particular value for ’\n’. Aug 16, 2018 at 2:15
  • 1
    @PeteBecker: The answer says the value it gives is for ASCII, which covers almost all modern SBCS systems. People working with other character sets will have to find the applicable value themselves.
    – Ben Voigt
    Aug 16, 2018 at 13:02
  • 3
    @PeteBecker: On Windows, "\n" is { 0x0A, 0x00 } as well. It's the file (or console) I/O that translates it to 0D 0A... for the purposes of the C++ program it is just one. You could have a system where '\n' is -2, sure, but that would not be an ASCII system. The standard guarantees that character escapes are converted to the corresponding values from the execution character set. If the execution character set is ASCII, '\n' == 10, guaranteed.
    – Ben Voigt
    Aug 16, 2018 at 13:36
  • 2
    @PeteBecker: LF is the name of a character code. The parentheses aren't part of the code name, they indicate additional information. But my main point is this: '\n' is always exactly one character. The compiler must not convert it to a CR-LF pair. If the execution character set is ASCII, then the one character \n has to be 0A. If the execution character set is EBCDIC, then obviously it will be different. But newline translations have absolutely nothing to do with string literals.
    – Ben Voigt
    Aug 16, 2018 at 15:42
14

When specified in a string literal, "\n" will be translated to the matching ascii code (0x0a on linux), and stored as-is. It will not be stored as a backslash, followed by a literal n. Escape sequences are for you convenience only, to allow string literals with embedded newlines.

On the other hand, your shell, running in the terminal, does not do such substitution: it submits a literal backslash and n, which will be printed as such.

To have a newline printed, enter a newline:

$ echo "Hello
 World" | ./your-program 
6
  • 1
    While implementation of echo varies from computer to computer, echo -e "hello\nworld" is a pretty reliable way to get \n to be interpreted as a newline. If not, then printf "hello\nworld\n" is guaranteed to work if you have printf on your machine. Aug 15, 2018 at 20:20
  • 2
    Not the ASCII code, the "execution charset" (character encoding)—almost certainly not ASCII (even if, for this character, the code might be the same). Aug 15, 2018 at 23:14
  • In particular, there are still computers running where the execution charset is EBCDIC, and '\n' is nothing like 0x0a. Aug 16, 2018 at 10:54
  • It might be good to know how to enter a literal newline from a terminal: in most terminals, press Ctrl+V followed by Ctrl+J.
    – mindriot
    Aug 16, 2018 at 21:01
  • @BallpointBen, printf (the command-line utility) is standard, so you're very likely to have it (probably built-in to the shell). echo -e is quite common, but notably Dash (Debian's/Ubuntu's /bin/sh) doesn't treat that kindly. Then there's the $'..' quoting that does process C-style escapes. It's not standard and so dash doesn't support it either, but almost all other shells do support it.
    – ilkkachu
    Aug 16, 2018 at 23:52
10

The string on cout<<"Hello\nworld" it's converted by the compiler to a compiled string where escape codes are converted to characters, so the cout function when executed does not see a two char "\n" string but the equivalent code for next line character.

But the cin gets the string of every typed character at runtime and does not convert escape codes. So if you want to convert those escape codes you have to make a replace function.

6

cin does not include a C++ compiler. Escape sequences in string literals are a feature of C++'s lexer, which is part of the C++ compiler. Streams more or less give you what came from the OS (they may do some CRLF -> CR translation or similar based on the OS, but that's it).

4

Why escape characters are not working when I read from cin?

Because stream readers are defined to be that way. At the core, each character is read separately. Only higher level functions provided additional meaning to the characters.

When a compiler processes the string literal "Hello\nWorld", its file reader passes it two characters too. Only the C++ compiler/parser translates them into one character based on the rules of the language.

4

In compiled code the character literal ’\n’ is replaced by an implementation-specific value that the runtime system treats as a newline character. The language definition does not require any particular value.

When reading input from the console or a file the incoming text is not being compiled, and the character sequence “\n” does not have any special meaning. It is simply two characters.

0
3

Escape characters in a string are interpreted by the compiler. The sequence \n consists of two actual characters, which the compiler converts to a single newline character during compilation. The same sequence is not interpreted in any way when you enter it on the command line, so results in the exact two characters that you entered.

If you want to process your string to interpret escape sequences, you will have to do it yourself (or use an appropriate library).

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