Hello, I am having some difficulty with the stringstream class. Here is a simple program I run: #include <sstream> #include <iostream> #include <string> int main(int argc, char* argv[]) { std::string temp; std::string stuff = "asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf"; std::stringstream a; a << stuff.c_str(); std::cout << a.str() << std::endl; a >> temp; std::cout << a.str(); return 0; } The output when built with g++ is: asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf This is not what I expect when using the >> operator. I looked at the stringstream class and do not see it overloading the >> operator and believe that it should be inheriting from the same place as the ifstream class. When I use the >> operator on a std::ifstream object, it is destructive, however this does not appear to be the case for the stringstream object (which I believe it should be). Using the same program with Visual C++ will yield correct results (ie. an output of asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf asdf Is this a bug in the implementation of the stringstream class? Thanks, Silqun
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