C++ – How to output a character as an integer through cout

cioiostreamoutputstreamtype conversion

#include <iostream>

using namespace std;

int main()
{  
    char          c1 = 0xab;
    signed char   c2 = 0xcd;
    unsigned char c3 = 0xef;

    cout << hex;
    cout << c1 << endl;
    cout << c2 << endl;
    cout << c3 << endl;
}

I expected the output are as follows:

ab
cd
ef

Yet, I got nothing.

I guess this is because cout always treats 'char', 'signed char', and 'unsigned char' as characters rather than 8-bit integers. However, 'char', 'signed char', and 'unsigned char' are all integral types.

So my question is: How to output a character as an integer through cout?

PS: static_cast(…) is ugly and needs more work to trim extra bits.

Best Answer

char a = 0xab;
cout << +a; // promotes a to a type printable as a number, regardless of type.

This works as long as the type provides a unary + operator with ordinary semantics. If you are defining a class that represents a number, to provide a unary + operator with canonical semantics, create an operator+() that simply returns *this either by value or by reference-to-const.

source: Parashift.com - How can I print a char as a number? How can I print a char* so the output shows the pointer's numeric value?