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I have a function that reads user input from std::cin, and I want to write a unittest that inserts some strings into std::cin, such that later extraction from std::cin will read that string instead of pausing for keyboard input.

Ideally, I would change the function signature so that I can pass a custom istream as parameters, but I can't do that here since I have a fixed interface that I cannot change.

cin.putback() is almost what I wanted, however it is inserting only one character at a time, and it is inserting them in reverse order (but I read somewhere that putting back char that wasn't originally there can be dangerous, though the website doesn't elaborate why). I've tried several methods to inject the string to cin's internal buffer cin.rdbuf(), but none would work either. I've also considered using an external testing script or creating subprocess, however I'd like to first consider a test in pure C++.

So, is there any method to put strings into cin? Or do you know a better way to inject my "fake keyboard input"?

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Instead of screwing around with cin, you can have your program accept a general std::istream&. When running normally, just pass it cin. During a unit test, pass it an I/O stream of your own creation.


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