GSP
Quick Navigator

Search Site

Unix VPS
A - Starter
B - Basic
C - Preferred
D - Commercial
MPS - Dedicated
Previous VPSs
* Sign Up! *

Support
Contact Us
Online Help
Handbooks
Domain Status
Man Pages

FAQ
Virtual Servers
Pricing
Billing
Technical

Network
Facilities
Connectivity
Topology Map

Miscellaneous
Server Agreement
Year 2038
Credits
 

USA Flag

 

 

Man Pages
std::money_put::put,do_put(3) C++ Standard Libary std::money_put::put,do_put(3)

std::money_put::put,do_put - std::money_put::put,do_put


Defined in header <locale>
public:


iter_type put(iter_type out, bool intl, std::ios_base& f, (1)


char_type fill, long double quant) const;
iter_type put(iter_type out, bool intl, std::ios_base& f, (2)
char_type fill, const string_type& quant) const;
protected:


virtual iter_type do_put(iter_type out, bool intl, std::ios_base& str, (3)


char_type fill, long double units) const;
virtual iter_type do_put(iter_type out, bool intl, std::ios_base& str, (4)
char_type fill, const string_type& digits) const;


Formats monetary value and writes the result to output stream.


1-2) Public member functions, call the member function do_put of the most derived
class.
3) The numeric arguments units is converted to a wide character string as if by
ct.widen(buf1, buf1 + std::sprintf(buf1, "%.0Lf", units), buf2), where ct is the
std::ctype facet imbued in str.getloc() and buf1 and buf2 are sufficiently large
character buffers. The resulting character string buf2 is processed, formatted, and
output to out as desribed below.
4) From the string argument digits, only the optional leading minus sign (as
determined by comparing to ct.widen('-'), where ct is the std::ctype facet imbued in
str.getloc()) and the immediately following digit characters (as classified by ct)
are taken as the character sequence to be processed, formatted, and output to out as
described below.


Given the character sequence from the previous steps, if the first character equals
ct.widen('-'), calls mp.neg_format() to obtain the formatting pattern, otherwise
calls mp.pos_format(), where mp is the std::moneypunct<CharT, intl> facet imbued in
str.getloc().


Thousands separator and decimal point characters are inserted as required by
mp.grouping(), mp.frac_digits(), mp.decimal_point(), and mp.thousands_sep(), and the
resulting string is placed in the output sequence where value appears in the
formatting pattern.


If str.flags() & str.showbase is non-zero (the std::showbase manipulator was used),
then the currency symbol or string is generated by calling mp.curr_symbol() and
placed in the output sequence where symbol appears in the formatting pattern.


If mp.positive_sign() (in case positive format pattern is used) or
mp.negative_sign() (in case negative format pattern is used) returns a string with
more than one character, the first character returned is placed in the output
sequence where sign appears in the formatting pattern, and the rest of the
characters are placed after all other characters, for example, formatting pattern
{sign, value, space, symbol} with units 123 and negative_sign of "-" may result in
"-1.23 €", while negative_sign of "()" would generate "(1.23 €)".


If the number of characters generated for the specified format is less than the
value returned by str.width(), then copies of fill are inserted to bring the total
length of the output sequence to exactly str.width(), as follows:


* If str.flags() & str.adjustfield equals str.internal, the fill characters are
inserted where none or space appears in the formatting pattern.
* Otherwise, if str.flags() & str.adjustfield equals str.left, the copies of fill
are appended after all other characters
* Otherwise, the fill characters are placed before all other characters.


In the end, calls str.width(0) to cancel the effects of any std::setw.


An iterator pointing immediately after the last character produced


The currency units are assumed to be the smallest non-fractional units of the
currency: cents in the U.S, yen in Japan.

// Run this code


#include <iostream>
#include <iomanip>
#include <locale>


struct my_punct : std::moneypunct_byname<char, false> {
my_punct(const char* name) : moneypunct_byname(name) {}
string_type do_negative_sign() const { return "()"; }
};


int main()
{
std::locale loc("ru_RU.utf8");
std::cout.imbue(loc);
long double units = -123.45;
std::cout << "In Russian locale, " << units << " prints as "
<< std::showbase;
// note, the following is equivalent to simply std::put_money(units)
std::use_facet<std::money_put<char>>(loc).put(
{std::cout}, false, std::cout, std::cout.fill(), units);
std::cout << '\n';


std::cout.imbue(std::locale(std::cout.getloc(), new my_punct("ru_RU.utf8")));
std::cout << "With negative_sign set to \"()\", it prints as ";
std::use_facet<std::money_put<char>>(loc).put(
{std::cout}, false, std::cout, std::cout.fill(), units);
std::cout << '\n';
}


In Russian locale, -123,45 prints as -1.23 руб
With negative_sign set to "()", it prints as (1.23 руб)


defines monetary formatting parameters used by std::money_get and
moneypunct std::money_put
(class template)
money_get parses and constructs a monetary value from an input character sequence
(class template)
put_money formats and outputs a monetary value
(C++11) (function template)

2022.07.31 http://cppreference.com

Search for    or go to Top of page |  Section 3 |  Main Index

Powered by GSP Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface.
Output converted with ManDoc.