I am refactoring some legacy code which is using printf
with longs strings (without any actual formatting) to print out plain text table headers which looks notionally like this:
| Table | Column | Header |
which are currently being produced like this:
printf("| Table | Column | Header |");
I would like to produce the above with code to the effect of1:
outputStream << "|" << std::setw(10) << std::center << "Table"
<< "|" << std::setw(10) << std::center << "Column"
<< "|" << std::setw(9) << std::center << "Header"
<< "|" << std::endl;
which does not compile because <iomanip>
has the stream manipulators std::left
, std::right
and std::internal
, but does not seem to have any std::center
. Is there a clean way to do this already in standard C++ libraries, or will I have to manually compute the necessary spacing?
1Even though this is more verbose than the C code, it will be less verbose in the long run because of the number of printf
statements and the amount of infixed duplication in their strings. It will also be more extensible and maintainable.
In C++20 you'll be able to use std::format
to do this:
outputStream << std::format("|{:^10}|{:^10}|{:^9}|\n",
"Table", "Column", "Header");
Output:
| Table | Column | Header |
In the meantime you can use the {fmt} library, std::format
is based on. {fmt} also provides the print
function that makes this even easier and more efficient (godbolt):
fmt::print("|{:^10}|{:^10}|{:^9}|\n", "Table", "Column", "Header");
Disclaimer: I'm the author of {fmt} and C++20 std::format
.