The most efficient way would be just to iterate over the string until you find a non-digit character. If there are any non-digit characters, you can consider the string not a number.
bool is_number(const std::string& s) { std::string::const_iterator it = s.begin(); while (it != s.end() && std::isdigit(*it)) ++it; return !s.empty() && it == s.end(); }
Or if you want to do it the C++11 way:
bool is_number(const std::string& s) { return !s.empty() && std::find_if(s.begin(), s.end(), [](unsigned char c) { return !std::isdigit(c); }) == s.end(); }
As pointed out in the comments below, this only works for positive integers. If you need to detect negative integers or fractions, you should go with a more robust library-based solution. Although, adding support for negative integers is pretty trivial.