Reading until '\n' (End of Line) - c++

Firstly, i'm a beginner in C++, be mercyful. I can't find an answer.
Hi, i'm trying to write a interpreter. And i select '\n' as line terminator, when i try this:
#define __TEST__ 1
while(Source >> Word){ //Source is file descriptor. I can't use EOF method because of if i do that, i will need to write two statments. Critical...
if(Word == '\n'){ // Word is a string object.
//Clean the vector
# if __TEST__
cout << "Succesful!" << "\n";
# endif
}
}
When i try to compile this code, it's gives an error because of " ' " token. When i change it with ' " ' token, compiler gives no error but when runtime, program can't detect end of line. What is the fastest way of solve this problem?

>> discards white space, so Word won't ever contain a line break.
If you want to read until the end of the line, you should use the getline function rather than >>.

Related

C++ reading a file into a struct

Using fstreams I have a file opened that contains numerous lines. Each contiguos set of 4 lines are such that: the first line is an int, the second and third are strings and fourth is a double. This sequence continues till EOF.
I'm attempting to load these lines into a struct array:
struct Library {
int id;
string title;
string artist;
double price;
};
and the code I'm trying to implement to load data into the struct is this:
const int LIMIT = 10
Library database[LIMIT];
ifstream file;
file.open("list.txt");
if(file) {
while(!(file.eof()) && counter < LIMIT) {
file >> database[counter].id;
getline(file, database[counter].title;
getline(file, database[counter].artist;
file >> database[counter].price;
}
} else {
...
}
// Using the following to debug output
for(int i = 0; i < counter; i++) {
cout << "ID: " << database[i].id << endl
<< "Title: " << database[i].title << endl
<< "Artist: " << database[i].artist << endl
<< "Price: " << database[i].price << endl
<< "-----------------------" << endl;
}
The file I'm trying to throw at this thing is
1234
Never Gonna Give You Up
Rick Astley
4.5
42
Thriller
Michael Jackson
32.1
The problem I'm having here is that between reading the id and title using file >> ... and getline(...) is that somewhere a newline bite is being introduced screwing up the output, which displays this monstrosity...
ID: 1234
Title:
Artist: Never Gonna Give You Up
Price: 0
--------------------
ID: 0
Title:
Artist:
Price: 0
--------------------
The solution is probably the most basic of solutions, but mainly because I can't figure out exactly what is going on with the newline bite I can't combobulate a phrase to shove into google and do my stuff there, and I'm at the stage where I've been looking at a problem so long, basic knowledge isn't working properly - such as how to handle basic input streams.
Any form of help would be much appreciated! Thanks in advance :)
This happens because the >> operator for the input stream only grabs part of a line, and does not always grab the newline character at the end of the line. When followed by a call to getline, the getline will grab the rest of the line previously parsed, not the line after it. There are a few ways to solve this: you can clear the buffer from the input stream after each read, or you can simply get all your input from getline and just parse the resulting strings into an integer or a double when you need to with calls to stoi or stod.
As a side note, you don't want to detect the end of your file the way you presently are. See why is eof considered wrong inside a loop condition?
You can solve this problem by adding:
fflush(file);
everytime before you use getline(file, ...). Basically this will clear the input buffer before you use the getline() function. And fflush() is declared in the cstdio library.
file >> database[counter].id;
will read, in this case, a whitespace separated sequence of characters that is interpreted as an int. The newline is considered whitespace. You should now be sitting on that newline character, thus the getline() will read nothing -- successfully -- and increment the file position just past that.
You may be better off using getline() for each line and then separately interpreting the lines from the reading. For example, the first line read could be interpreted with a subsequent std::stoi() to get the integer representation from the string.

How to extract specific substring from getline function in C++?

I'm fairly new to C++ so please forgive me if my terminology or methodology isn't correct.
I'm trying to write a simple program that:
Opens two input files ("infileicd" and "infilesel").
Opens a single output file "list.txt".
Compares "infilesel" to "infileicd" line by line.
If a line from "infilesel" is found in "infileicd", it writes that line from "infileicd" to "list.txt", effectively making a separate log file.
I am using the getline() function to do this but have run into trouble when trying to compare each file line. I think it might be easier if I could use only the substring of interest to use as a comparison.
The problem is that there are multiple words within the entire getline string and I am only really interested in the second one. Here are two examples:
"1529 nic1_mau_op_mode_3 "8664afm007-01" "1" OUTPUT 1 0 LOGICAL 4 4136"
"1523 pilot_mfd_only_sel "8664afm003-02" "1" OUTPUT 1 0 LOGICAL 4 4112"
"nic1_mau_op_mode_3" and "pilot_mfd_only_sel" are the only substrings of interest.
It would make it a lot easier if I could only use that second substring to compare but I don't know how to extract it specifically from the getline() function. I haven't found anything suggesting it is impossible to do this, but if it is impossible, what would be an alternative method for extracting that substring?
This is a personal project so I'm under no time contstraints.
Any assistance is greatly apprecated in advance. Here is my code (so far):
int main()
{
//Open the file to write the selected variables to.
ofstream writer("list.txt");
//Open the selected variabels file to be read.
ifstream infilesel;
infilesel.open("varsel.txt");
//Open the icd file to be read.
ifstream infileicd;
infileicd.open("aic_fdk_host.txt");
//Check icd file for errors.
if (infileicd.fail()){
cerr << "Error opening icd.\n" << endl;
return 1;
}
else {
cout << "The icd file has been opened.\n";
}
//Check selected variables file for errors.
if (infilesel.fail()){
cerr << "Error opening selection file.\n" << endl;
return 1;
}
else {
cout << "The selection file has been opened.\n";
}
//Read each infile and copy contents of icd file to the list file.
string namesel;
string nameicd;
while(!infileicd.eof()){
getline(infileicd, nameicd);
getline(infilesel, namesel);
if (nameicd != namesel){ //This is where I would like to extract and compare the two specific strings
infileicd; //Skip to next line if not the same
} else {
writer << nameicd << namesel << endl;
}
}
writer.close();
infilesel.close();
infileicd.close();
return 0;
}
So, based on what we discussed in the comments, you just need to toss the stuff you don't want. So try this:
string namesel;
string nameicd;
string junk;
while(!infileicd.eof()){
// Get the first section, which we'll ignore
getline(infileicd, junk, ' ');
getline(infilesel, junk, ' ');
// Get the real data
getline(infileicd, nameicd, ' ');
getline(infilesel, namesel, ' ');
// Get the rest of the line, which we'll ignore
getline(infileicd, junk);
getline(infilesel, junk);
Basically, getline takes a delimiter, which by default is a newline. By setting it as a space the first time, you get rid of the first junk section, using the same method, you get the part you want, and then the final portion goes to the end of the line, also ignoring it.

Simple C++ not reading EOF

I'm having a hard time understanding why while (cin.get(Ch)) doesn't see the EOF. I read in a text file with 3 words, and when I debug my WordCount is at 3 (just what I hoped for). Then it goes back to the while loop and gets stuck. Ch then has no value. I thought that after the newline it would read the EOF and break out. I am not allowed to use <fstream>, I have to use redirection in DOS. Thank you so much.
#include <iostream>
using namespace std;
int main()
{
char Ch = ' ';
int WordCount = 0;
int LetterCount = 0;
cout << "(Reading file...)" << endl;
while (cin.get(Ch))
{
if ((Ch == '\n') || (Ch == ' '))
{
++WordCount;
LetterCount = 0;
}
else
++LetterCount;
}
cout << "Number of words => " << WordCount << endl;
return 0;
}
while (cin >> Ch)
{ // we get in here if, and only if, the >> was successful
if ((Ch == '\n') || (Ch == ' '))
{
++WordCount;
LetterCount = 0;
}
else
++LetterCount;
}
That's the safe, and common, way to rewrite your code safely and with minimal changes.
(Your code is unusual, trying to scan all characters and count whitespace and newlines. I'll give a more general answer to a slightly different question - how to read in all the words.)
The safest way to check if a stream is finished if if(stream). Beware of if(stream.good()) - it doesn't always work as expected and will sometimes quit too early. The last >> into a char will not take us to EOF, but the last >> into an int or string will take us to EOF. This inconsistency can be confusing. Therefore, it is not correct to use good(), or any other test that tests EOF.
string word;
while(cin >> word) {
++word_count;
}
There is an important difference between if(cin) and if(cin.good()). The former is the operator bool conversion. Usually, in this context, you want to test:
"did the last extraction operation succeed or fail?"
This is not the same as:
"are we now at EOF?"
After the last word has been read by cin >> word, the string is at EOF. But the word is still valid and contains the last word.
TLDR: The eof bit is not important. The bad bit is. This tells us that the last extraction was a failure.
The Counting
The program counts newline and space characters as words. In your file contents "this if fun!" I see two spaces and no newline. This is consistent with the observed output indicating two words.
Have you tried looking at your file with a hex editor or something similar to be sure of the exact contents?
You could also change your program to count one more word if the last character read in the loop was a letter. This way you don't have to have newline terminated input files.
Loop Termination
I have no explanation for your loop termination issues. The while-condition looks fine to me. istream::get(char&) returns a stream reference. In a while-condition, depending on the C++ level your compiler implements, operator bool or operator void* will be applied to the reference to indicate if further reading is possible.
Idiom
The standard idiom for reading from a stream is
char c = 0;
while( cin >> c )
process(c);
I do not deviate from it without serious reason.
you input file is
this is fun!{EOF}
two spaces make WordCount increase to 2
and then EOF, exit loop! if you add a new line, you input file is
this is fun!\n{EOF}
I took your program loaded it in to visual studio 2013, changed cin to an fstream object that opened a file called stuff.txt which contains the exact characters "This is fun!/n/r" and the program worked. As previous answers have indicated, be careful because if there's not a /n at the end of the text the program will miss the last word. However, I wasn't able to replicate the application hanging in an infinite loop. The code as written looks correct to me.
cin.get(char) returns a reference to an istream object which then has it's operator bool() called which returns false when any of the error bits are set. There are some better ways to write this code to deal with other error conditions... but this code works for me.
In your case, the correct way to bail out of the loop is:
while (cin.good()) {
char Ch = cin.get();
if (cin.good()) {
// do something with Ch
}
}
That said, there are probably better ways to do what you're trying to do.

Why does getline return empty lines if none exist

I have a file containing the following lines:
5556
0 bla.dxf
1 blub.dxf
2 buzz.dxf
The numbers and text are seperated by a singular tab each, there is no whitespace character after 5556. The following code is used for parsing.
int main(int, char**){
std::ifstream file("test.bld");
std::string buildingName;
file >> buildingName;
std::cout << buildingName << std::endl;
std::string buf;
while(getline(file, buf)) {
if(buf.empty()){std::cout << "String was empty"<<std::endl;}
else std::cout << buf << std::endl;
}
return 0;
}
When I parse the file I get an empty line although there obviously is none.
The output reads as follows:
5556
String was empty
0 bla.dxf
1 blub.dxf
2 buzz.dxf
This is only a minimal example. The whole file and the parser is more complex and I would very much like to use direct parsing for the first element and getline for the rest. What am I misunderstanding about line parsing with getline and how do I avoid getting empty lines?
operator>>(istream, string) reads up to but not including the first whitespace character after the extracted token.
To skip the rest of the line after extracting a token, you can either use
std::cin >> std::ws;
(if you know that there is only a newline remaining), or
std::cin.ignore(std::numeric_limits<std::streamsize>::max(), '\n');
to skip to the end of the line regardless.
I'm assuming because
file >> buildingName;
doesn't move the cursor to the next line, but leaves it at the end of the current line. So when you call getline, you'll read an empty string and then move to the next.

Read File line by line using C++

I am trying to read a file line by line using the code below :
void main()
{
cout << "b";
getGrades("C:\Users\TOUCHMATE\Documents\VS projects\GradeSystem\input.txt");
}
void getGrades(string file){
string buf;
string line;
ifstream in(file);
if (in.fail())
{
cout << "Input file error !!!\n";
return;
}
while(getline(in, line))
{
cout << "read : " << buf << "\n";
}
}
For some reason it keeps returning "input file error!!!". I have tried to full path and relative path (by just using the name of the file as its located in the same folder as the project). what am I doing wrong?
You did not escape the string. Try to change with:
getGrades("C:\\Users\\TOUCHMATE\\Documents\\VS projects\\GradeSystem\\input.txt");
otherwise all the \something are misinterpreted.
As Felice said the '\' is an escape. Thus you need two.
Or you can use the '/' character.
As windows has accepted this as a directory separator for a decade or more now.
getGrades("C:/Users/TOUCHMATE/Documents/VS projects/GradeSystem/input.txt");
This has the advantage that it looks much neater.
first, if you wanna say '\' in a string, you should put '\\', that's the path issue.
then, the string buf is not in connect to your file..
The backslash in C strings is used for escape sequences (e.g. \n is newline, \r carriage return, \t is a tabulation, ...), thus your string is getting garbled because for each backslash+character sequence the compiler is replacing the corresponding escape sequence. To enter backslashes in a C string you have to escape them, using \\:
getGrades("C:\\Users\\TOUCHMATE\\Documents\\VS projects\\GradeSystem\\input.txt");
By the way, it's int main, not void main, and you should return an exit code (usually 0 if everything went fine).