How do I use the ofstream to write text to the end of a file without erasing its content inside?
You can pass the flag ios::app when opening the file:
ofstream ofs("filename", ios::app);
You want to append to the file. Use ios::app as the file mode when creating the ofstream.
Appending will automatically seek to the end of the file.
Use ios::app as the file mode.
The seekp() function allows you to arbitrarily set the position of the file pointer, for open files.
As people have mentioned above, opening the file in the following manner will do:
ofstream out("path_to_file",ios::app);
It will do the trick, if you want to append data to the file by default.
But, if you want to go to the end of the file, in the middle of the program, with the default mode not being ios::app, you can use the following statement:
out.seekp(0,ios::end)
This will place the put pointer 0 bytes from the end of file. http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/ostream/ostream/seekp
Make sure you use the correct seekp(), as there are 2 overloads of seekp(). The one with 2 parameters is favored in this situation.
Related
I've a file on which I require multiple operations. Sometimes I just want to append data at the end of the file, sometimes I just want to read from the file, and sometimes, I want to erase all the data and write form the beginning of the file. And then, I again need to append data at the end of file.
I'm using following code:
ofstream writeToTempFile;
ifstream readFromTempFile;
writeToTempFile.open("tempFile.txt", ios::app | ios::out);
readFromTempFile.open("tempFile.txt", ios::in);
// Reading and Appending data to the file
// Now it is time to erase all the previous data and start writing from the beginning
writeToTempFile.open("tempFile.txt", std::ofstream::trunc); // Here I'm removing the contents.
// Write some data to the file
writeToTempFile.open("tempFile.txt", std::ofstream::app); // Using this, I'm again having my file in append mode
But what I've done doesn't work correctly. Please suggest me some solution in C++. ( Not in C)
The problem with the code is:
I wasn't closing the file before I called the method open again on it.
So, close the file before you re-open it with some different permissions.
I am programming on C++. In my code I create a text file, write data to the file and reading from the file using stream, after I finish the sequence I desire I wish to clear all the data inside the txt file. Can someone tell me the command to clear the data in the txt file. Thank you
If you simply open the file for writing with the truncate-option, you'll delete the content.
std::ofstream ofs;
ofs.open("test.txt", std::ofstream::out | std::ofstream::trunc);
ofs.close();
http://www.cplusplus.com/reference/fstream/ofstream/open/
As far as I am aware, simply opening the file in write mode without append mode will erase the contents of the file.
ofstream file("filename.txt"); // Without append
ofstream file("filename.txt", ios::app); // with append
The first one will place the position bit at the beginning erasing all contents while the second version will place the position bit at the end-of-file bit and write from there.
If you set the trunc flag.
#include<fstream>
using namespace std;
fstream ofs;
int main(){
ofs.open("test.txt", ios::out | ios::trunc);
ofs<<"Your content here";
ofs.close(); //Using microsoft incremental linker version 14
}
I tested this thouroughly for my own needs in a common programming situation I had. Definitely be sure to preform the ".close();" operation. If you don't do this there is no telling whether or not you you trunc or just app to the begging of the file. Depending on the file type you might just append over the file which depending on your needs may not fullfill its purpose. Be sure to call ".close();" explicity on the fstream you are trying to replace.
Deleting the file will also remove the content.
See remove file.
You should create a function which clears all the data of the file and then run it.
void clear()
{
ofstream file("fileout.txt");
file<<"";
}
I am using ofstream to output some text to a file in ios::app mode within a loop. But after some step, I need to clear the content of the file. I know we can do it by either delete the file and open again or to open it again with ios::trunc, but is there any where I can get it done without close and open the file again?
If you have opened it in ios::app mode, there's no way to clear content without opening it again. ofstream can only put text in a file, and as text files are sequential, you can't directly erase data on them.
Note sure if it is possible with io streams, but in general you can truncate an open file by setting its current position to 0 and then setting the EOF marker on the file. In the Win32 API, for instance, you can do that with SetFilePointer() and SetEndOfFile().
I am opening a file with ifstream to check if it exists. Then I close it and open it with ofstream to write to it, and I think setting ios::trunc flag allows me to overwrite it.
However I'd like the ability to keep the file open if it exists, but I used an ifstream to open it so does that mean I can't write to the file till I close and re-open using fstream or ofstream? I didn't use fstream to begin with because that wouldn't tell me if the file was already there or not.
Just open a read-write fstream on the file. You can test if the file previously existed (and was non-empty) by seeking to the end and seeing if you're at a non-zero offset. If so, the file existed, and you can do whatever with it. If not, the file didn't exist or was empty. Assuming you don't need to distinguish between those two cases, you can then proceed as if it did not exist.
For example:
// Error checking omitted for expository purposes
std::fstream f("file.txt", std::ios::in | std::ios::out);
f.seekg(0, std::ios::end)
bool didFileExist = (f.tellg() > 0);
f.seekg(0, std::ios::beg);
// Now use the file in read-write mode. If didFileExist is true, then the
// file previously existed (and has not yet been modified)
The setting ios::trunc erases previous contents of the file.
Try opening the file without this setting; with only the 'write' setting.
this is touching very serios problem - race conditions - what if somebody manages to do something with this file between closing and reopening? unfortunately iostream does not provide any means of resolving that issue - you can use cstdio FILE. If you want to turncate file if exists or create new one if not use fopen(name, "w"). If you want to turncate file if it exists or fail otherwise, then it seems standard library has nothing to offer, and you should go to other libraries or platform specific functions like OpenFile in windows.h
When I do
fstream someFile("something.dat", ios::binary|ios::out);
someFile.seekp(someLocation, ios::beg);
someFile.write(someData, 100);
It seems to replace the entire file with those 100 bytes instead of replacing only the appropriate 100 bytes, as if I had specified ios::trunc. Is there a portable way to not have it truncate the file?
Edit: adding ios::in seems to do the trick, by why is this required, and is that standard behavior?
Edit #2: I am not trying to append to the existing file. I need to replace the 100 bytes while leaving the rest unaffected.
You want the append flag, ios::app, if you want to write at the end of the file.
To do it somewhere arbitrarily in the middle of the file, you need to seek to the right place. You CAN do this by opening the file for in and out, but if I were you I'd create a temp file, copy input up to mark, write your new data, copy the rest to EOF, close the files and replace the previous version with the temp file. This is called a "Master File update".
AFAIR ios::out only specifies the file is for output and ios:binary only specifies the files is binary. The default behaviour for a stream is to create a new file and overwrite the old file. If you want to modify an existing file you must open the file with the ios::app flag.
ATM I cannot check my references so be sure to double check, but I felieve that is accurate.
Since the file already exists open it in 'read+write' mode and then do seekp. I think it will work.
fstream someFile("something.dat", ios::binary|ios::out|ios::in);
someFile.seekp(someLocation, ios::beg);
someFile.write(someData, 100);
The ios:in mask tells the file pointer to position at the beginning of the file so it can start reading in from the start. But, you may want to use fseek to set the file pointer at the beginning of the file.