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Published byMyrtle Glenn Modified over 8 years ago
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program Moving Data Within a C++ Program Input –Getting data from the command line (we’ve looked at this) –Getting data from the standard input stream –Getting data from files Output –Sending data to standard output (we’ve looked at this) –Sending data to files Transfer within the program –Moving data into and out of different types of variables –Moving data into and out of different data structures
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program Overview of Today’s Session Using the on-line C++ reference pages (throughout) Basic input and output stream features Basic file input and output stream features Moving data into and out of variables Moving character data into and out of strings Moving data into and out of a vector container
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program C++ Reference Link on CSE232 Web Page
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program Main C++ Reference Page
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program C++ I/O Page
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program C++ I/O Examples Page
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program File I/O Examples Exercise: try out examples from C++ I/O reference –Do they work as written? –What files do you need to include to make them work? –What happens if you try to open a file that doesn’t exist? –What other ways can you explore the behaviors of the features those examples are using/illustrating?
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program C++ I/O Display All
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program Review: C++ Input/Output Stream Classes #include using namespace std; int main (int, char*[]) { int i; // cout == std ostream cout << “how many?” << endl; // cin == std istream cin >> i; cout << “You said ” << i << “.” << endl; return 0; } header file –Use istream for input –Use ostream for output Overloaded operators << ostream insertion operator >> istream extraction operator Other methods –ostream: write, put –istream: get, eof, good, clear Stream manipulators –ostream: flush, endl, setwidth, setprecision, hex, boolalpha
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program Review: C++ File I/O Stream Classes #include using namespace std; int main () { ifstream ifs; ifs.open (“in.txt”); ofstream ofs (“out.txt”); if (ifs.is_open () && ofs.is_open ()) { int i; ifs >> i; ofs << i; } ifs.close (); ofs.close (); return 0; } header file –Use ifstream for input –Use ofstream for output Other methods –open, is_open, close –getline –seekg, seekp File modes –in, out, ate, app, trunc, binary
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program Redirecting File Output Exercise: printing to a file vs. to stdout –Use the standard syntax for main that we used last week –Program always writes out “hello, world!” –If argc > 1 writes to file whose name is given by argv[1] –Otherwise writes to standard output
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program Review: C++ string Class #include using namespace std; int main (int, char*[]) { string s; // empty s = “”; // empty s = “hello”; s += “, ”; s = s + “world!”; cout << s << endl; return 0; } header file Various constructors Assignment operator Overloaded operators += + = == [] The last one is really useful: indexes string if (s[0] == ‘h’) …
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program Review: C++ String Stream Classes #include using namespace std; int main () { ifstream ifs (“in.txt”); if (ifs.is_open ()) { string line_1, word_1; getline (ifs, line_1); istringstream iss (line_1); iss >> word_1; cout << word_1 << endl; } return 0; } header file –Use istringstream for input –Use ostringstream for output Useful for scanning input –Get a line from file into string –Wrap string in a stream –Pull words off the stream Useful for formatting output –Use string as format buffer –Wrap string in a stream –Push formatted values into stream –Output formatted string to file
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program Using C++ String Stream Classes #include using namespace std; int main (int argc, char *argv[]) { if (argc < 3) return 1; ostringstream argsout; argsout << argv[1] << “ ” << argv[2]; istringstream argsin (argsout.str()); float f,g; argsin >> f; argsin >> g; cout << f << “ / ” << g << “ is ” << f/g << endl; return 0; } Program gets arguments as C-style strings But let’s say we wanted to input floating point values from the command line Formatting is tedious and error-prone in C-style strings ( sprintf etc.) iostream formatting is friendly Exercise: check whether any of the strings passed by argv are unsigned decimal integers (leading zeroes still ok) –print their sum if there are any –otherwise print the value 0
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program In-Memory “(in core)” Formatting Exercise: read and translate a file –Read integers and booleans (“true”, “false”) from a file Test by writing your own test file with different combinations –Use a string to get one line of data at a time –Use a string stream to extract space separated tokens into another string variable –Check whether each token is a boolean (if not treat as int) Convert to local variable of that type using another string stream Printout whether it’s a boolean or an integer, and print out the value of the local variable, making sure to preserve formatting
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CSE 232: Moving Data Within a C++ Program A Couple More Things to Try Exercise: printing out text from a named file –Open a text file whose name is given in argv –Print out the contents of the file to standard output –Detect the end of the file Stop reading text, close the named file, and end the program Exercise: typing text into a named file –Read text from the standard input stream –Put the text into a file whose name is given by argv[1] –Detect when the user types in the character sequence q! Stop reading text, close the named file, and end the program
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