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Not quite sure how cin works internally, but it does expect a new line (enter) press for when you finish your input So we now know that cin >> n >> g takes two integer values from the input stream and returns a reference to cin. So, what it reads is probably a\n but it only shows you the a in the first cout

Then, same goes for b\n but again shows you b This is equivalent to cin >> n Cin eats up that '\n', the new line character.

Mean in the cout, cin, cerr and clog names

I would say char but i haven't found anything to confirm it. Mean in cout, cin, cerr and clog Can someone please explain to me what cout stands for? More correctly, cin reads from standard input (stdin)

This may be the console, but it could also be a file or other device depending on the operator system and redirection by the user. 5 std::cout and std::cin are indeed global variables Your code doesn't compile because that's not the way the language works You have to put the stream on the left, and then the operator and then the variables you are streaming into/out of

(for output, you can use literals and expressions as well as variables.)

3 there is no close equivalent to cin in c However, you can read things in c using the c standard library, you can look at the relevant part here (cstdio reference). Forgive me for possibly asking a fairly simple question, but what does the insertion operator actually mean and do in a program Cout << / cin >>)

!cin checks is fail () returns true for the stream Before c++11 this was going through void*, after that it is using bool operator as indicated here What fail checks is if failbit or badbit are up for the stream and you can read more about them here. However, the result of (cin >> variable) is a reference to cin

Therefore we can again use >> in order to get more values from the stream

Cin >> n >> g

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