// 2001-05-24 Benjamin Kosnik // Copyright (C) 2001 Free Software Foundation, Inc. // // This file is part of the GNU ISO C++ Library. This library is free // software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the // terms of the GNU General Public License as published by the // Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option) // any later version. // This library is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, // but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of // MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the // GNU General Public License for more details. // You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License along // with this library; see the file COPYING. If not, write to the Free // Software Foundation, 59 Temple Place - Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307, // USA. // 27.7.6 member functions (stringstream_members) #include #include void test01() { bool test = true; std::stringstream is01; const std::string str00; const std::string str01 = "123"; std::string str02; const int i01 = 123; int a,b; std::ios_base::iostate state1, state2, statefail, stateeof; statefail = std::ios_base::failbit; stateeof = std::ios_base::eofbit; // string str() const str02 = is01.str(); VERIFY( str00 == str02 ); // void str(const basic_string&) is01.str(str01); str02 = is01.str(); VERIFY( str01 == str02 ); state1 = is01.rdstate(); is01 >> a; state2 = is01.rdstate(); VERIFY( a = i01 ); // 22.2.2.1.2 num_get virtual functions // p 13 // in any case, if stage 2 processing was terminated by the test for // in == end then err != ios_base::eofbit is performed. VERIFY( state1 != state2 ); VERIFY( state2 == stateeof ); is01.str(str01); is01 >> b; VERIFY( b != a ); // as is01.good() is false, istream::sentry blocks extraction. is01.clear(); state1 = is01.rdstate(); is01 >> b; state2 = is01.rdstate(); VERIFY( b == a ); VERIFY( state1 != state2 ); VERIFY( state2 == stateeof ); #ifdef DEBUG_ASSERT assert(test); #endif } void redirect_buffer(std::ios& stream, std::streambuf* new_buf) { stream.rdbuf(new_buf); } std::streambuf* active_buffer(std::ios& stream) { return stream.rdbuf(); } // libstdc++/2832 void test02() { bool test = true; const char* strlit01 = "fuck war"; const char* strlit02 = "two less cars abstract riot crew, critical mass/SF"; const std::string str00; const std::string str01(strlit01); std::string str02; std::stringbuf sbuf(str01); std::streambuf* pbasebuf0 = &sbuf; std::stringstream sstrm1; VERIFY( sstrm1.str() == str00 ); // derived rdbuf() always returns original streambuf, even though // it's no longer associated with the stream. std::stringbuf* const buf1 = sstrm1.rdbuf(); // base rdbuf() returns the currently associated streambuf std::streambuf* pbasebuf1 = active_buffer(sstrm1); redirect_buffer(sstrm1, &sbuf); std::stringbuf* const buf2 = sstrm1.rdbuf(); std::streambuf* pbasebuf2 = active_buffer(sstrm1); VERIFY( buf1 == buf2 ); VERIFY( pbasebuf1 != pbasebuf2 ); VERIFY( pbasebuf2 == pbasebuf0 ); // derived rdbuf() returns the original buf, so str() doesn't change. VERIFY( sstrm1.str() != str01 ); VERIFY( sstrm1.str() == str00 ); // however, casting the active streambuf to a stringbuf shows what's up: std::stringbuf* psbuf = dynamic_cast(pbasebuf2); str02 = psbuf->str(); VERIFY( str02 == str01 ); // How confusing and non-intuitive is this? // These semantics are a joke, a serious defect, and incredibly lame. } int main() { test01(); test02(); return 0; }