20

I'm trying to create a neatly formatted table on C++ by setting the width of the different fields. I can use setw(n), doing something like

cout << setw(10) << x << setw(10) << y << endl;

or change ios_base::width

cout.width (10);
cout << x;
cout.width (10);
cout << y << endl;

The problem is, neither of the alternatives allows me to set a default minimum width, and I have to change it everytime I'll write something to the stream.

Does anybody knows a way I can do it without having to repeat the same call countless times? Thanks in advance.

5

3 Answers 3

21

You can create an object that overloads operator<< and contains an iostream object that will automatically call setw internally. For instance:

class formatted_output
{
    private:
        int width;
        ostream& stream_obj;

    public:
        formatted_output(ostream& obj, int w): width(w), stream_obj(obj) {}

        template<typename T>
        formatted_output& operator<<(const T& output)
        {
            stream_obj << setw(width) << output;

            return *this;
        }

        formatted_output& operator<<(ostream& (*func)(ostream&))
        {
            func(stream_obj);
            return *this;
        }
};

You can now call it like the following:

formatted_output field_output(cout, 10);
field_output << x << y << endl;
1
  • 3
    +1, thanks! In case anyone else is interested: the second operator<< defined above allows the class to deal with functions such as std::endl, as described here. Hope this helps any other curious cats who are picking apart @Jason's code... Commented Jan 2, 2014 at 16:26
1

I know this is still making the same call, but I know of no other solution from what I am getting from your question.

#define COUT std::cout.width(10);std::cout<<

int main()
{
    std::cout.fill( '.' );

    COUT "foo" << std::endl;
    COUT "bar" << std::endl;

    return 0;
}

Output:

..........foo
..........bar
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  • 2
    Why use macro if a template can be easily made and even allows chaining of output?
    – Ruslan
    Commented Mar 23, 2016 at 9:36
0

why not just create a function?

pseudocode e.g.

void format_cout(text, w) {
 cout << text << width(w);
}

That's a bit scrappy but hopefully you get the idea.

1
  • This approach is nice and simple, but it wouldn't let you use chained operator<<s. It would also cause (whitespace) problems when you try to use std::endl... Commented Jan 2, 2014 at 15:37

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