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Home/ Questions/Q 952703
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T23:56:15+00:00 2026-05-15T23:56:15+00:00

In the example below, what exactally is the << operator doing? I’m guessing it

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In the example below, what exactally is the << operator doing? I’m guessing it is not a bitwise operator.

std::cout << "Mouse down @ " << event.getPos() << std::endl;

I understand what the code will do here: Use standard out, send this text, send an end of line. Just I’ve never come accross the use of this << apart from on raw binary.

I’m starting out with C++. And, as an operator of sorts, it’s hard to search for a description of this and what it means. Can someone enlighten me and/or give me a pointer as to what to google for?

Thanks
Ross

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T23:56:15+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 11:56 pm

    The answer is: The << operator does left shifts by default for integral types, but it can be overloaded to do whatever you want it to!

    This syntax for piping strings into a stream was first (I think) demonstrated in C++ inventor Bjarne Stroustroup’s eponymous book The C++ Programming Language. Personally, I feel that redefining an operator to do IO is gimmicky; it makes for cool-looking demo code but doesn’t contribute to making code understandable. Operator overloading as a technique has been widely criticized in the programming language community.


    EDIT: Since nobody else has mentioned this yet:

    operator<< is defined in the ostream class, of which cout is an instance. The class definition sits in the iostream library, which is #include‘d as <iostream>.

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