Working with Numbers and Strings
Numbers and strings are the fundamental types of any programming language; all other types are based on or composed of these ones. Developers are confronted all the time with tasks such as converting between numbers and strings, parsing and formatting strings, and generating random numbers. This chapter is focused on providing useful recipes for these common tasks using modern C++ language and library features.
The recipes included in this chapter are as follows:
- Converting between numeric and string types
- Limits and other properties of numeric types
- Generating pseudo-random numbers
- Initializing all the bits of the internal state of a pseudo-random number generator
- Creating cooked user-defined literals
- Creating raw, user-defined literals
- Using raw string literals to avoid escaping characters
- Creating a library of string helpers
- Verifying the format of a string using regular expressions
- Parsing the content of a string using regular expressions
- Replacing the content of a string using regular expressions
- Using
std::string_view
instead of constant string references - Formatting text with
std::format
- Using
std::format
with user-defined types
Let's start this chapter by looking at a very common problem developers face on a daily basis, which is converting between numeric and string types.