How to read in user entered comma separated integers?

僤鯓⒐⒋嵵緔 提交于 2019-11-28 13:55:54

All of the existing answers are excellent, but all are specific to your particular task. Ergo, I wrote a general touch of code that allows input of comma separated values in a standard way:

template<class T, char sep=','>
struct comma_sep { //type used for temporary input
    T t; //where data is temporarily read to
    operator const T&() const {return t;} //acts like an int in most cases
};
template<class T, char sep>
std::istream& operator>>(std::istream& in, comma_sep<T,sep>& t) 
{
    if (!(in >> t.t)) //if we failed to read the int
        return in; //return failure state
    if (in.peek()==sep) //if next character is a comma
        in.ignore(); //extract it from the stream and we're done
    else //if the next character is anything else
        in.clear(); //clear the EOF state, read was successful
    return in; //return 
}

Sample usage http://coliru.stacked-crooked.com/a/a345232cd5381bd2:

typedef std::istream_iterator<comma_sep<int>> istrit; //iterators from the stream
std::vector<int> vec{istrit(in), istrit()}; //construct the vector from two iterators

Since you're a beginner, this code might be too much for you now, but I figured I'd post this for completeness.

A priori, you should want to check that the comma is there, and declare an error if it's not. For this reason, I'd handle the first number separately:

std::vector<int> dest;
int value;
std::cin >> value;
if ( std::cin ) {
    dest.push_back( value );
    char separator;
    while ( std::cin >> separator >> value && separator == ',' ) {
        dest.push_back( value );
    }
}
if ( !std::cin.eof() ) {
    std::cerr << "format error in input" << std::endl;
}

Note that you don't have to ask for the size first. The array (std::vector) will automatically extend itself as much as needed, provided the memory is available.

Finally: in a real life example, you'd probably want to read line by line, in order to output a line number in case of a format error, and to recover from such an error and continue. This is a bit more complicated, especially if you want to be able to accept the separator before or after the newline character.

Victor

You can use getline() method as below:

#include <vector>
#include <string>
#include <sstream>

int main() 
{
  std::string input_str;
  std::vector<int> vect;

  std::getline( std::cin, input_str );

  std::stringstream ss(str);

  int i;

  while (ss >> i)
  {
    vect.push_back(i);

    if (ss.peek() == ',')
    ss.ignore();
  }
}

The code is taken and processed from this answer.

Victor's answer works but does more than is necessary. You can just directly call ignore() on cin to skip the commas in the input stream.

What this code does is read in an integer for the size of the input array, reserve space in a vector of ints for that number of elements, then loop up to the number of elements specified alternately reading an integer from standard input and skipping separating commas (the call to cin.ignore()). Once it has read the requested number of elements, it prints them out and exits.

#include <iostream>
#include <iterator>
#include <limits>
#include <vector>

using namespace std;

int main() {
    vector<int> vals;
    int i;
    cin >> i;
    vals.reserve(i);
    for (size_t j = 0; j != vals.capacity(); ++j) {
        cin >> i;
        vals.push_back(i);
        cin.ignore(numeric_limits<streamsize>::max(), ',');
    }
    copy(begin(vals), end(vals), ostream_iterator<int>(cout, ", "));
    cout << endl;
}
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;

int main() {
    int x,i=0;
    char y;               //to store commas
    int arr[50];
    while(!cin.eof()){
        cin>>x>>y;
        arr[i]=x;
        i++;
    }

    for(int j=0;j<i;j++)
        cout<<arr[j];     //array contains only the integer part
    return 0;
}

The code can be simplified a bit with new std::stoi function in C+11. It takes care of spaces in the input when converting and throws an exception only when a particular token has started with non-numeric character. This code will thus accept input

" 12de, 32, 34 45, 45 , 23xp,"

easily but reject

" de12, 32, 34 45, 45 , 23xp,"

One problem is still there as you can see that in first case it will display " 12, 32, 34, 45, 23, " at the end where it has truncated "34 45" to 34. A special case may be added to handle this as error or ignore white space in the middle of token.

wchar_t in;
std::wstring seq;
std::vector<int> input;
std::wcout << L"Enter values : ";

while (std::wcin >> std::noskipws >> in)
{
    if (L'\n' == in || (L',' == in))
    {
        if (!seq.empty()){
            try{
                input.push_back(std::stoi(seq));
            }catch (std::exception e){ 
                std::wcout << L"Bad input" << std::endl;
            }
            seq.clear();
        }
        if (L'\n' == in) break;
        else continue;
    }
    seq.push_back(in);
}

std::wcout << L"Values entered : ";
std::copy(begin(input), end(input), std::ostream_iterator<int, wchar_t>(std::wcout, L", "));
std::cout << std::endl;
#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int a[1000];
int main(){
    string s;
    cin>>s;
    int i=0;
    istringstream d(s);
    string b;
    while(getline(d,b,',')){
        a[i]= stoi(b);
        i++;
    }
    for(int j=0;j<i;j++){
        cout<<a[j]<<" ";
    }
}

This code works nicely for C++ 11 onwards, its simple and i have used stringstreams and the getline and stoi functions

You can use scanf instead of cin and put comma beside data type symbol

#include<bits/stdc++.h>
using namespace std;
int main()
 {
    int a[10],sum=0;
    cout<<"enter five numbers";
    for(int i=0;i<3;i++){
    scanf("%d,",&a[i]);
    sum=sum+a[i];
    }
    cout<<sum;
}
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