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I/O in C++ October 7, 2008. Junaed Sattar
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Stream I/O a stream is a flow of bytes/characters/ints or any type of data input streams: to the program output streams: from the program note I use plural one program can have multiple I/O streams associated and vice-versa
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Input/Output Console based, no GUI standard streams: cin: standard input cout: standard output cerr: standard error
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Extraction/Insertion cout << “Hello world!”; cout << “The value of i is “ << i << endl; //endl puts a new line cout << “Please enter your name: “; string name; cin >> name;
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What are cin and cout? Stream classes Classes have methods, as we know so does cin and cout some common to all I/O stream classes in C++ File I/O, binary/text mode I/O, console I/O
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One example cin inputs ints, chars, null-terminated strings, string objects but terminates when encounters space (ascii character 32) workaround? use the “get” method
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Snippet char tData[100]; // This is a method in C++ istream classes for // inputting text //including spaces cin.get( tData, 99 ); // or cin.get(tData,99,'\n'); Inputting “i am oh so cool” cin.get gets the entire line just cin will get “I” space termination
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Or, Use the getline function getline( cin, name );
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File I/O Reading from or writing to files on disk ifstream and ofstream classes dedicated for input and output respectively or, use fstream
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Example Files Program(filesdemo) ofstream myofile; myofile.open( “sample.txt” ); myofile << “This is a sample line I'm writing\n”; myofile.close();... ifstream myifile; myifile.open( “sample.txt” ); string oneLine; getline( myifile, oneLine ); cout << oneLine; myifile.close();
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Read/Write to files (files1/2) Similar to how we use cin and cout remember, these are I/O streams too myfile is a file stream object, then: to write an int: int i = 10; myfile << i; to read an int: int i; myfile >> i;
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Binary files As opposed to text files, they are unformatted as ascii. text files stores everything as ascii text strings even numbers binary files do not Example: consider outout of the program in the previous slide
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Difference? Example program Accepts student ID (I input 1010) Accepts name (I input Junaed) Accepts CGPA (I input 4.5) Save into two files, as text and binary
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Storage TEXT FILE BINARY FILE
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Binary files Files by default are text Different methods to write and read requires casting (we'll see casting soon) different data format If time permits, we'll revisit
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Failures? If open fails? Check before use if( !myifile ) { cerr << “Cannot open file!”; exit(1); } End of file? while( myifile.fail() ) { //do your operations here }
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Random vs Sequential Random access files nonsequential, as a result faster access times, content must be suitable for random access for example. not on network streams! or console input
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File “heads” Access positions one each for read and write hence two methods: seekg (as in “get”) for reading seekp (as in “put”) for writing ifstreams have seekg ofstreams have seekp
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seeking seekg( position, mode) //(same for seekp) position is a long integer signed offset mode can be ios::beg: from the beginning ios::end from the end ios::cur from current position
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telling tellg and tellp returns as long integer, the position of the get and put positions, respectively
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example seeks file.seekg( 20L, ios::beg ); file.seekp( -100L, ios::cur ); long pPosition = file.tellp(); long gPosition = file.tellg();
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