| string::resize | public member function |
void resize ( size_t n, char c ); void resize ( size_t n ); |
Resize string
Resizes the string content to n characters.
If n is smaller than the current length of the string, the content is reduced to its first n characters, the rest being dropped.
If n is greater than the current length of the string, the content is expanded by appending as many instances of the c character as needed to reach a size of n characters.
The second version, actually calls: resize(n,char()), so when a string is resized to a greater size without passing a second argument, the new character positions are filled with the default value of a char, which is the null character.
Parameters
- n
- New size for the string, expressed in characters.
size_t is an unsigned integral type. - c
- Character to be used to fill any additional character space in the string.
Return Value
noneIf the requested size is greater than the maximum size (string::max_size) a length_error exception is thrown.
Example
// resizing string #include <iostream> #include <string> using namespace std; int main () { size_t sz; string str ("I like to code in C"); cout << str << endl; sz=str.size(); str.resize (sz+2,'+'); cout << str << endl; str.resize (14); cout << str << endl; return 0; } |
Output:
I like to code in C |
Basic template member declaration
( basic_string<charT,traits,Allocator> )typedef typename Allocator::size_type size_type; void resize( size_type n, charT c ); void resize( size_type n ); |
See also
| string::size | Return length of string (public member function) |
| string::clear | Clear string (public member function) |
| string::max_size | Return maximum size of string (public member function) |
