Possible Duplicate:
Implementing a no-op std::ostream
Is there any stream equivalent of NULL in c++? I want to write a function that takes in a stream if the user wants to have the internal outputted to somewhere, but if not, the output goes into some fake place
void data(std::stream & stream = fake_stream){ stream << "DATA" ; }
i want to be able to chose to do data()
or data(std::cout)
Edit: Taken from @Johannes Schaub - litb's mail here with slight modifications:
template<typename Ch, typename Traits = std::char_traits<Ch> > struct basic_nullbuf : std::basic_streambuf<Ch, Traits> { typedef std::basic_streambuf<Ch, Traits> base_type; typedef typename base_type::int_type int_type; typedef typename base_type::traits_type traits_type; virtual int_type overflow(int_type c) { return traits_type::not_eof(c); } }; // convenient typedefs typedef basic_nullbuf<char> nullbuf; typedef basic_nullbuf<wchar_t> wnullbuf; // buffers and streams // in some .h extern std::ostream cnull; extern std::wostream wcnull; // in a concrete .cpp nullbuf null_obj; wnullbuf wnull_obj; std::ostream cnull(&null_obj); std::wostream wcnull(&wnull_obj);
Use those:
void data(std::ostream& stream = cnull){ // whatever... }
Now, this looks cool and all, but the following is way shorter and works, because if a null pointer is provided to the constructor of ostream
, it automatically sets the badbit and silently ignores any writes:
// in .h extern std::ostream cnull; extern std::wostream wcnull; // in .cpp std::ostream cnull(0); std::wostream wcnull(0);
The standard guarantees this works, beginning from 27.6.2.2 [lib.ostream.cons] p1
which describes the constructor of ostream
that takes a pointer to a streambuf
:
Effects: Constructs an object of class
basic_ostream
, assigning initial values to the base class by callingbasic_ios<charT,traits>::init(sb)
.
The relevant function from basic_ios
, 27.4.4.1 [lib.basic.ios.cons] p3
:
void init(basic_streambuf<charT,traits>* sb);
Postconditions: The postconditions of this function are indicated in Table 89:
The important row from Table 89:
rdstate() -- goodbit if sb is not a null pointer, otherwise badbit.
What happens if the badbit
is set is described under 27.6.2.6 [lib.ostream.unformatted]
:
Each unformatted output function begins execution by constructing an object of class
sentry
. If this object returns true, while converting to a value of type bool, the function endeavors to generate the requested output.
This implies that, in case the sentry
is false, it does not. Here is how the sentry
converts to bool
, taken from 27.6.2.3 [lib.ostream::sentry] p3 & p5
:
3) If, after any preparation is completed,
os.good()
istrue
,ok_ == true
otherwise,ok_ == false
.5)
operator bool();
Effects: Returns ok_.
(ok_
is a member of ostream::sentry
of type bool
.)
Note that these quotes are still present in C++11, just in different places. In order of appearance in this answer:
27.6.2.2 [lib.ostream.cons] p1
=> 27.7.3.2 [ostream.cons] p1
27.4.4.1 [lib.basic.ios.cons] p3
=> 27.5.5.2 [basic.ios.cons]
27.6.2.6 [lib.ostream.unformatted]
=> 27.7.3.7 [ostream.unformatted] p1
27.6.2.3 [lib.ostream::sentry] p3 & p5
=> 27.7.3.4 [ostream::sentry] p4 & p5
Linux file /dev/null is a black hole like you're looking for. In Windows there's a device called NUL:. I've never tried to open that file, but I've used it from the command line
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