File writing already uses buffering. If it is not efficient for you, you can actually modify the filebuf, eg increase its size or use a custom one.
Avoid doing unnecessary flushes of your buffer, which is done with endl. That is the most "abused" feature of file-writing.
The simplest way to create a file-stream for outputting is:
#include <fstream>
int main( int argc, char * argv[])
{
if( argc > 1 )
{
std::ofstream outputFile( argv[1] );
if( outputFile )
{
outputFile << 99 << '\t' << 158 << '\n'; // write some delimited numbers
std::vector< unsigned char > buf;
// write some data into buf
outputFile.write( &buf[0], buf.size() ); // write binary to the output stream
}
else
{
std::cerr << "Failure opening " << argv[1] << '\n';
return -1;
}
}
else
{
std::cerr << "Usage " << argv[0] << " <output file>\n";
return -2;
}
return 0;
}