Question

Is it implementation defined or standards suggest a default fill character for streams?

Sample code:

#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>
#include <sstream>

int main ()
{
    std::stringstream stream;
    stream << std::setw( 10 ) << 25 << std::endl;

    std::cout << stream.str() << std::endl;
}

With clang++ --stdlib=libstdc++

$ clang++ --stdlib=libstdc++ test.cpp
$ ./a.out | hexdump
0000000 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 20 32 35 0a 0a
000000c
$

With clang++ --stdlib=libc++

$ clang++ --stdlib=libc++ test.cpp
$ ./a.out | hexdump
0000000 ff ff ff ff ff ff ff ff 32 35 0a 0a
000000c

Version

$ clang++ --version
Apple LLVM version 4.2 (clang-425.0.28) (based on LLVM 3.2svn)
Target: x86_64-apple-darwin12.5.0
Thread model: posix

I was able to fix it with std::setfill(' '), but am curious to know if it is a clang bug.

Was it helpful?

Solution

The default fill character for a stream s is s.widen(' ') according to 27.5.5.2 [basic.ios.cons] paragraph 3/Table 128. What character results from s.widen(' ') is, however, dependent on the std::locale as s.widen(c) is (27.5.5.3 [basic.ios.members] paragraph 12):

std::use_facet<std::ctype<cT>>(s.getloc()).widen(c)

BTW, you should use std::ostringstream when you are only writing to the stream and there is no use of std::endl ever.

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