<< and >> in C++
- by JacKeown
I don't quite understand what this means...I'm just learning C++ from my very very very basic Python experience...and so this may be a very stupid question. My question is...say you have your classic "Hello World" program and you have the line:
cout<<"Hello World!"<<endl;
what does the << mean...because I was just looking at using input in C and saw that you'd do something like:
int i;
cini;
and I noticed that it has instead of << and I've read that those are bitwise shifts...and I don't exactly understand what those are...but I think it might be different here...Help...Thanks in advance