std::basic_istream<CharT,Traits>::sync

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< cpp‎ | io‎ | basic istream
 
 
Input/output library
I/O manipulators
C-style I/O
Buffers
(deprecated in C++98)
Streams
Abstractions
File I/O
String I/O
Array I/O
(deprecated in C++98)
(deprecated in C++98)
(deprecated in C++98)
Synchronized Output
Types
Error category interface
(C++11)
 
 
int sync();

Synchronizes the input buffer with the associated data source.

Behaves as UnformattedInputFunction, except that gcount() is not affected. After constructing and checking the sentry object,

if rdbuf() is a null pointer, returns -1

Otherwise, calls rdbuf()->pubsync(). If that function returns -1, calls setstate(badbit) and returns -1. Otherwise, returns 0.

Parameters

(none)

Return value

0 on success, -1 on failure or if the stream does not support this operation (is unbuffered).

Notes

As with readsome(), it is implementation-defined whether this function does anything with library-supplied streams. The intent is typically for the next read operation to pick up any changes that may have been made to the associated input sequence after the stream buffer last filled its get area. To achieve that, sync() may empty the get area, or it may refill it, or it may do nothing. A notable exception is Visual Studio, where this operation discards the unprocessed input when called with a standard input stream.

Example

Demonstrates the use of input stream sync() with file input, as implemented on some platforms.

#include <iostream>
#include <fstream>
 
void file_abc()
{
    std::ofstream f("test.txt");
    f << "abc\n";
}
 
void file_123()
{
    std::ofstream f("test.txt");
    f << "123\n";
}
 
int main()
{
    file_abc(); // file now contains "abc"
    std::ifstream f("test.txt");
    std::cout << "Reading from the file\n";
    char c;
    f >> c; std::cout << c;
    file_123(); // file now contains "123"
    f >> c; std::cout << c;
    f >> c; std::cout << c << '\n';
    f.close();
 
    file_abc(); // file now contains "abc"
    f.open("test.txt");
    std::cout << "Reading from the file, with sync()\n";
    f >> c; std::cout << c;
    file_123(); // file now contains "123"
    f.sync();
    f >> c; std::cout << c;
    f >> c; std::cout << c << '\n';
}

Possible output:

Reading from the file
abc
Reading from the file, with sync()
a23

See also

[virtual]
synchronizes the buffers with the associated character sequence
(virtual protected member function of std::basic_streambuf<CharT,Traits>)
synchronizes with the underlying storage device
(public member function of std::basic_ostream<CharT,Traits>)