This function is supposed to read a fraction and place it in an array. If the user enters \'0\' the function is supposed to exit. I am trying to do this using the cin.peek
There are two issues with your use of std::istream::peek():
std::ws: (std::cin >> std::ws).peek().std::istream::peek() is not a char. Instead, it is an std::char_traits<char>::int_type (which is a fancy spelling of int). The result may, e.g., be std::char_traits<char>::eof() and if the value of '0' happens to be negative (I'm not aware of any platform where it is; however, e.g., the funny character from my name 'ü' is a negative value on platforms where char is signed) you wouldn't get the correct result, either. That is, you normally compare the result of std::istream::peek() against the result of std::char_traits<char>::to_int_type(), i.e., you'd use something like this: std::cin.peek() == std::char_traits<char>::to_int_type('0')That said, your program doesn't check whether it could successfully read the nominator and the denominator, separated by a slash. You always want to verify that reading was successful, e.g., using something like
if ((std::cin >> nominator >> slash >> denominator) && slash == '/') {
...
}
Just for entertainment, you can create a manipulator for testing that a character is a slash, indeed:
std::istream& slash(std::istream& in) {
if ((in >> std::ws).peek() != std::char_traits<char>::to_int_type('/')) {
in.setstate(std::ios_base::failbit);
}
return in;
}
This way, you'd encapsulate the test for slash. If you need to use this in multiple places this is quite handy.