std::setw
|   Defined in header  <iomanip>
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|   /* unspecified */ setw( int n );  | 
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When used in an expression out << std::setw(n) or in >> std::setw(n), sets the width parameter of the stream out or in to exactly n.
Some operations reset the width to zero (see below), so std::setw may need to be repeatedly called to set the width for multiple operations.
Parameters
| n | - | new value for width | 
Return value
An object of unspecified type such that
-  if out is an object of type std::basic_ostream<CharT, Traits>, the expression out << setw(n)
- has type std::basic_ostream<CharT, Traits>&
 - has value out
 - behaves as if it called f(out, n)
 
 -  if in is an object of type std::basic_istream<CharT, Traits>, the expression in >> setw(n)
- has type std::basic_istream<CharT, Traits>&
 - has value in
 - behaves as if it called f(in, n)
 
 
where the function f is defined as:
void f(std::ios_base& str, int n) { // set width str.width(n); }
Notes
The width property of the stream will be reset to zero (meaning "unspecified") if any of the following functions are called:
- Input
 
- Output
 
- Overloads of basic_ostream::operator<<() that take arithmetic types or void pointers (at Stage 3 of num_put::put())
 - operator<<(basic_ostream&, char) and operator<<(basic_ostream&, char*)
 - operator<<(basic_ostream&, basic_string&)
 - std::put_money (inside money_put::put())
 - std::quoted (when used with an output stream)
 
The exact effects this modifier has on the input and output vary between the individual I/O functions and are described at each operator<< and operator>> overload page individually.
Example
#include <iomanip> #include <iostream> #include <sstream> int main() { std::cout << "no setw: [" << 42 << "]\n" << "setw(6): [" << std::setw(6) << 42 << "]\n" << "no setw, several elements: [" << 89 << 12 << 34 << "]\n" << "setw(6), several elements: [" << 89 << std::setw(6) << 12 << 34 << "]\n"; std::istringstream is("hello, world"); char arr[10]; is >> std::setw(6) >> arr; std::cout << "Input from \"" << is.str() << "\" with setw(6) gave \"" << arr << "\"\n"; }
Output:
no setw: [42] setw(6): [ 42] no setw, several elements: [891234] setw(6), several elements: [89 1234] Input from "hello, world" with setw(6) gave "hello"
Defect reports
The following behavior-changing defect reports were applied retroactively to previously published C++ standards.
| DR | Applied to | Behavior as published | Correct behavior | 
|---|---|---|---|
| LWG 183 | C++98 | setw could only be used with streams oftype std::ostream or std::istream  | 
usable with any character stream  | 
See also
|   manages field width  (public member function of std::ios_base)  | |
|   changes the fill character  (function template)  | |
|   sets the placement of fill characters  (function)  | |
|   controls whether prefix is used to indicate numeric base  (function)  |