getline not asking for input? [duplicate]

Solution 1:

You have to be careful when mixing operator>> with getline. The problem is, when you use operator>>, the user enters their data, then presses the enter key, which puts a newline character into the input buffer. Since operator>> is whitespace delimited, the newline character is not put into the variable, and it stays in the input buffer. Then, when you call getline, a newline character is the only thing it's looking for. Since that's the first thing in the buffer, it finds what it's looking for right away, and never needs to prompt the user.

Fix: If you're going to call getline after you use operator>>, call ignore in between, or do something else to get rid of that newline character, perhaps a dummy call to getline.

Another option, and this is along the lines of what Martin was talking about, is to not use operator>> at all, and only use getline, then convert your strings to whatever datatype you need. This has a side effect of making your code more safe and robust. I would first write a function like this:

int getInt(std::istream & is)
{
    std::string input;
    std::getline(is,input);

    // C++11 version
    return stoi(input); // throws on failure

    // C++98 version
    /*
    std::istringstream iss(input);
    int i;
    if (!(iss >> i)) {
        // handle error somehow
    }
    return i;
    */
}

You can create a similar function for floats, doubles and other things. Then when you need in int, instead of this:

cin >> i;

You do this:

i = getInt(cin);

Solution 2:

Its because you have a '\n' left lying on the input stream from a previous call.

cin >> i;  // This reads the number but the '\n' you hit after the number
           // is still on the input.

The easiest way to do interactive user input is to make sure each line is processed independently (as the user will hit enter after each prompt).

As a result always read a line, then process the line (until you get familiar with the streams).

std::string  line;
std::getline(std::cin, line);

std::stringstream linestream(line);

// Now processes linestream.
std::string garbage;
lienstream >> i >> garbage; // You may want to check for garbage after the number.

if (!garbage.empty())
{
    std::cout << "Error\n";
}

Solution 3:

Ignore some characters until line feed is reached.

cin.ignore(256, '\n')
getline (cin,mystr);