This is my code for writing input to text file
ofstream fout("C:\\det.txt",ios::app);
fout << input << endl;
fout.close();
this program is working but when i enter more than one input into it its output is like this
Output
four
three
two
in above output two is my last entry and four is my first entry , but i want it in reverse order , the latest input should appear first like
Required output
two // latest entry
three // 2nd latest entry
four // 3rd entry
Put the contents of the file into a vector, reverse the vector and reinsert the strings back into the file.
std::fstream file("C:\\det.txt", std::ios_base::in);
std::vector<std::string> lines;
std::string line;
while (std::getline(file, line))
{
if (!line.empty())
lines.push_back(line);
}
file.close();
file.open("C:\\det.txt", std::ios_base::trunc | std::ios_base::out);
std::copy(lines.rbegin(), lines.rend(), std::ostream_iterator<std::string>(file, "\n"));
If you don't need the file updated as soon as you enter an input, you need a buffer to store the input somewhere (std::vector<std::string> maybe) and then write it to file in reverse order.
Also you can read the whole file and rewrite it using fout << input << endl << readContent; each time but it is not a good way because it will be slow modifying the whole file each time input is given.
Related
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.
AccountNumber Type Amount
15 checking 52.42
23 savings 51.51
11 checking 12.21
is my tab delmited file
i would like to be able to search for rows by the account number. say if i put in 23, i want to get that specific row. how would id do that?
also more advance, if i wanted to change a specific value, say amount 51.51 in account 23. how do i fetch that value and replace it with a new value?
so far im just reading in row by row
string line;
ifstream is("account.txt");
if (is.is_open())
{
while (std::getline(is, line)) // read one line at a time
{
string value;
string parseline;
std::istringstream iss(line);
getline(line, parseline);
cout << parseline << endl; // do something with the value
while (iss >> value) // read one value at at time from the line
{
//cout << line << " "; // do something with the value
}
}
is.close();
}
else
cout << "File cant be opened" << endl;
return 0;
Given that each line is of variable length there is no way to index to particular row without first parsing the entire file.
But I suspect your program will want to manipulate random rows and columns. So I'd start by parsing out the entire file. Put each row into its own data structure in an array, then index that row in the array.
You can use "strtok" to split the input up into rows, and then strtok again to split each row into fields.
If I were to do this, I would first write a few functions that parse the entire file and store the data in an appropriate data structure (such as an array or std::map). Then I would use the data structure for the required operations (such as searching or editing). Finally, I would write the data structure back to a file if there are any modifications.
I would like to know how could I write always to the first line of a file.
I have numbers to share via a text file to another soft, and I want to write those numbers periodically on the first line.
Thanks.
eo
If you want to completely rewrite the file, discarding it's contents then simply use trunc mode. However, if there is any other content that you want to preserve then the easiest way would be to read the file into memory, change the first line and write everything back. I think it wouldn't be possible to change the first line directly unless you are overwriting the same amount of characters.
Look at this two functions:
ostream& seekp ( streampos pos );
ostream& seekp ( streamoff off, ios_bas:seekdir dir );
maybe this solves your problem
ofstream out("foo.txt");
out << "foo";
out << "\r" << "bar";
this will leave a file with only bar in it.
2nd method:
if the file only contains one line you could open it with ofstream::trunc and close it after each write
If the file is not massive then you could write a new new file copying across each line except for the custom first line. Then afterwards replace the original.
void ReplaceFirstLine(string filename)
{
ifstream infile;
ofstream outfile;
infile.open(filename.c_str(), ios_base::in);
outfile.open("tempname.txt", ios_base::out);
bool first = true;
string s;
while (getline(infile, s, '\n'))
{
if (first)
outfile << "my new first line\n";
else
outfile << s << endl;
first = false;
}
infile.close();
outfile.close();
::CopyFileA("tempname.txt", filename.c_str(), FALSE); // or Linux equivalent
}
I managed to successfully read the text in a file but it only reads until it hits an empty space, for example the text: "Hi, this is a test", cout's as: "Hi,".
Removing the "," made no difference.
I think I need to add something similar to "inFil.ignore(1000,'\n');" to the following bit of code:
inFil>>text;
inFil.ignore(1000,'\n');
cout<<"The file cointains the following: "<<text<<endl;
I would prefer not to change to getline(inFil, variabel); because that would force me to redo a program that is essentially working.
Thank you for any help, this seems like a very small and easily fixed problem but I cant seem to find a solution.
std::ifstream file("file.txt");
if(!file) throw std::exception("Could not open file.txt for reading!");
std::string line;
//read until the first \n is found, essentially reading line by line unti file ends
while(std::getline(file, line))
{
//do something line by line
std::cout << "Line : " << line << "\n";
}
This will help you read the file. I don't know what you are trying to achieve since your code is not complete but the above code is commonly used to read files in c++.
You've been using formatted extraction to extract a single string, once: this means a single word.
If you want a string containing the entire file contents:
std::fstream fs("/path/to/file");
std::string all_of_the_file(
(std::istreambuf_iterator<char>(filestream)),
std::istreambuf_iterator<char>()
);
Hi I have a file with some text in it. Is there some easy way to get the number of lines in the file without traversing through the file?
I also need to put the lines of the file into a vector. I am new to C++ but I think vector is like ArrayList in java so I wanted to use a vector and insert things into it. So how would I do it?
Thanks.
There is no way of finding the number of lines in a file without reading it. To read all lines:
1) create a std::vector of std::string
3 ) open a file for input
3) read a line as a std::string using getline()
4) if the read failed, stop
5) push the line into the vector
6) goto 3
You would need to traverse the file to detect the number of lines (or at least call a library method that traverse the file).
Here is a sample code for parsing text file, assuming that you pass the file name as an argument, by using the getline method:
#include <string>
#include <vector>
#include <fstream>
#include <iostream>
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
std::vector<std::string> lines;
std::string line;
lines.clear();
// open the desired file for reading
std::ifstream infile (argv[1], std::ios_base::in);
// read each file individually (watch out for Windows new lines)
while (getline(infile, line, '\n'))
{
// add line to vector
lines.push_back (line);
}
// do anything you like with the vector. Output the size for example:
std::cout << "Read " << lines.size() << " lines.\n";
return 0;
}
Update: The code could fail for many reasons (e.g. file not found, concurrent modifications to file, permission issues, etc). I'm leaving that as an exercise to the user.
1) No way to find number of lines without reading the file.
2) Take a look at getline function from the C++ Standard Library. Something like:
string line;
fstream file;
vector <string> vec;
...
while (getline(file, line)) vec.push_back(line);
Traversing the file is fundamentally required to determine the number of lines, regardless of whether you do it or some library routine does it. New lines are just another character, and the file must be scanned one character at a time in its entirety to count them.
Since you have to read the lines into a vector anyways, you might as well combine the two steps:
// Read lines from input stream in into vector out
// Return the number of lines read
int getlines(std::vector<std::string>& out, std::istream& in == std::cin) {
out.clear(); // remove any data in vector
std::string buffer;
while (std::getline(in, buffer))
out.push_back(buffer);
// return number of lines read
return out.size();
}