Is there any way how to set std::setw manipulator (or its function width) permanently? Look at this:
#include <iostream> #include <iomanip> #include <algorithm> #include <iterator> int main( void ) { int array[] = { 1, 2, 4, 8, 16, 32, 64, 128, 256 }; std::cout.fill( '0' ); std::cout.flags( std::ios::hex ); std::cout.width( 3 ); std::copy( &array[0], &array[9], std::ostream_iterator<int>( std::cout, ' ' ) ); std::cout << std::endl; for( int i = 0; i < 9; i++ ) { std::cout.width( 3 ); std::cout << array[i] << ' '; } std::cout << std::endl; }
After run, I see:
001 2 4 8 10 20 40 80 100 001 002 004 008 010 020 040 080 100
I.e. every manipulator holds its place except the setw/width which must be set for every entry. Is there any elegant way how to use std::copy (or something else) along with setw? And by elegant I certainly don’t mean creating own functor or function for writing stuff into std::cout.
Well, it’s not possible. No way to make it call
.widtheach time again. But you can use boost, of course:It does create its own functor, but it happens behind the scene 🙂