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Home/ Questions/Q 6093251
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 23, 20262026-05-23T12:32:19+00:00 2026-05-23T12:32:19+00:00

Given: typedef struct { char val[SOME_FIXED_SIZE]; } AString; typedef struct { unsigned char val[SOME_FIXED_SIZE];

  • 0

Given:

typedef struct { char val[SOME_FIXED_SIZE]; } AString;
typedef struct { unsigned char val[SOME_FIXED_SIZE]; } BString;

I want to add ostream operator << available for AString and BString.

std::ostream & operator<<(std::ostream &out, const AString &str)
{ 
   out.write(str.val, SOME_FIXED_SIZE);
   return out;
}

If I do the same for BString, the compiler complains about invalid conversion from 'const unsigned char*' to 'const char*'. The ostream.write does not have const unsigned char* as argument.

It seems << itself accepts the const unsigned char, so I try something like this

std::ostream & operator<<(std::ostream &out, const BString &str)
{ 
    for (int i=0; i<SOME_FIXED_SIZE; i++)
    {
        out<<str.val[i];
    }
    return out;
}

Can someone tell me if this is right/good practice or there are some better ways?
welcome any comments!

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-23T12:32:19+00:00Added an answer on May 23, 2026 at 12:32 pm

    The simplest and cleanest solution is to create an std::string, e.g.:

    out << std::string(str.val, str.val + sizeof(str.val));
    

    However, the question is: do you want formatted or unformatted output?
    For unformatted output, as ugly as it is, I’d just use a
    reinterpret_cast.

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