A kid is able to produce unique questions every minute. Are such questions valuable? Not really. He just see something new, combine it with something he knows and here is 100500th question ready.
I believe my question was simple and unique enough.
When asking question try to think about its value: how likely its the problem to someone else, how big is the problem, do you really need answer to your question or maybe there is another question (see XY problem), how well you present it.
Asking good question is a lot of work.
Your question is as its currently asked is useless: it's an interesting task for some more advanced brains, but solution is totally useless, only works as a prove, what brains are advanced.
Why do you need 2 things in one line? What is the problem with them not being in same line? This is missing and value of question is something like -20
.
There could be a totally different solution to that problem which you are trying to solve by having 2 things in one line. Experts hate to answer vague questions. Simple doesn't means it's clear, you just forgot to add important details.
Why the answer receive upvotes? Because it's good. Perhaps because its un-obvious solution (I am not c++ expert), perhaps because there is also missing problem, which makes your question more valuable.
fscanf(fp,"%d",&n); std::cout<<n<<std::endl;