Only partially.
C++11 <string>
has std::to_string
for the built-in types:
[n3290: 21.5/7]:
string to_string(int val);
string to_string(unsigned val);
string to_string(long val);
string to_string(unsigned long val);
string to_string(long long val);
string to_string(unsigned long long val);
string to_string(float val);
string to_string(double val);
string to_string(long double val);
Returns: Each function returns a string
object holding the
character representation of the value of its argument that would
be generated by calling sprintf(buf, fmt, val)
with a format
specifier of "%d"
, "%u"
, "%ld"
, "%lu"
, "%lld"
, "%llu"
,
"%f"
, "%f"
, or "%Lf"
, respectively, where buf
designates
an internal character buffer of sufficient size.
There are also the following that go the other way around:
[n3290: 21.5/1, 21.5/4]:
int stoi(const string& str, size_t *idx = 0, int base = 10);
long stol(const string& str, size_t *idx = 0, int base = 10);
unsigned long stoul(const string& str, size_t *idx = 0, int base = 10);
long long stoll(const string& str, size_t *idx = 0, int base = 10);
unsigned long long stoull(const string& str, size_t *idx = 0, int base = 10);
float stof(const string& str, size_t *idx = 0);
double stod(const string& str, size_t *idx = 0);
long double stold(const string& str, size_t *idx = 0);
However, there's nothing generic that you can use (at least not until TR2, maybe!), and nothing at all in C++03.
与恶龙缠斗过久,自身亦成为恶龙;凝视深渊过久,深渊将回以凝视…