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21:04
According to your logic the string "abcd" would not contain the string "bc", because the string "bc" contains a \0 after the c which is not found in "abcd". You have to distinguish between the value and representation. The value does not contain the final \0 (that's why strlen("abc") gives 3), while the representation does (that's why sizeof("abc") gives 4). When saying "the string X is included in the string Y", we are speaking about values, not representations.
Also note that in the source code the string is delimited by quotes. No null byte in sight here.
I'd like to know who taught you that there was an empty string between each character. Is this something you came up with on your own?
Simple logic. An empty string has no characters, and between consecutive characters, there are no characters. Therefore between two characters there's an empty string. Also see the other arguments I've given before. In addition, consider regular expressions which match the empty string: They also match everywhere.
For example, /ab*c/ matches "ac" because b* matches the empty string between a and c
21:22
I guess I'm not the best person to explain this. Can you post a question on Stackoverflow asking "Is my interpretation of the representation of string literals correct" and in the description explain what you're saying about this. I don't believe this is true what you're saying, but someone more well versed in the language will be able to answer. I'll give you an upvote as well. :-)
I'm not speaking about the representation, I'm speaking about the value. Just as when I'm speaking about the sum of the integers 1234 and 567, I'm not speaking about the byte sequence the specific implementation uses to store those in RAM (the sum should be the same on little-endian and big-endian machines).
(Of course it's not completely independent of the representation, because of e.g. overflow)
So because there are empty strings between each chwracter, you believe that the extraction iss >> str should still work because it's being given an empty string value?
Exactly. There's an empty string (i.e, no characters) before the delimiter (space), just as in the C representation of the empty string, there are no characters before the \0 delimiter. Also note that readline also works the same with the \n delimiter: If the \n follows immediately, it doesn't fail but gives an empty string.
21:41
But it DOESN'T work. And that's because the stream first calls the member function clear() which clears the string, and then trys to extract the first character but doesn't because it finds the delimiter which is a space character. And let's say the stream has the character "abc" and I have a character char c: If I do iss >> c should it give c an empty string value or not? It shouldn't and it won't because there is no empty string character.
brb
A character is not a string (not even a one-character string). Of course iss >> c should extract the next character, which is 'a'. And iss >> s (where s is a string variable) of course should read until the next delimiter (or eof, or other failure), therefore in this case, it should extract "abc".
And yes, the string extraction function as defined by the standard doesn't work for empty strings. I explained why I expected it to work.
It doesn't matter if it's a string or not. When we do iss >> c it calls the appropriate overlosd which will extract a single character. And as you said, the space between the quotes "" is the empty string. All strings have characters, so an empty character should be extracted. Like in the string case, iss >> s extracts character by character. If there is an empty string in the stream, then it should extract the empty string character and append it to s.
21:59
No, the empty string does not have characters. That's why it is called "empty". And there is no space in between the two quotes of the empty string. There's nothing in between. Also, there is no such thing as an empty character. The empty string has zero characters (strlen("") == 0), while any one-character string has, obviously, one character (strlen("a") == 1).
It doesn't even make sense to "extract the empty string character" because a string that contains a character is, by definition, not an empty string.
And of course it does matter if it is a string or not.
Only a string can be an empty string.
(Otherwise it would not be an empty string, would it?)
I implore you to ask a question! It will clear things up tremendously! Like I said I'm not the best at counter-arguing, and I will be honest I used to have the same belief as you but as I stared to learn the language I realized this is not true. There is such a thing as an empty string, but there is no such string between each and every character. If there was I'm pretty certain Standard documentation would point that out.
22:51
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Q: Do strings contain empty substrings everywhere?

celtschkThis question arises from a discussion originating on this answer. In a nutshell: The author of the answer (0x499602D2) claimed (correctly, as I now know) that when not skipping whitespace, but the next character is a whitespace, all extracts with the exception of characters will fail. I questi...


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