I need to read a text file which has various lines containing integers. I need to write those integers separately in a vector. Example, the first line of the text file contains 3 9 8 7 6 so vector[4]=3, vector[3]=9, vector[2]=8 and so on. Next read the second line 4 1 2 3 4 5 and write to another vector vector[5]=4, vector[4]=1...
I tried the code below but it will write from the second line, the whole line in one vector index.
int str; // Temp string to
cout << "Read from a file!" << endl;
ifstream fin("functions.txt"); // Open it up!
string line;
// read line count from file; assuming it's the first line
getline( fin, line );
I am trying to read a file line by line and then do something with the informations, so my method looks like this:
Code: void open_file(char *link) { FILE *file = fopen(link, "r"); if (file == NULL) { fprintf(stderr, "Could not open file. "); exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
[Code] ....
1) The first complain of valgrind is at the line where I use fgets and its telling me (invalid write of size x), but I have allocated my line to 56000 and the read line is shorter, why is there a write size error then :S?
2) at the line where I realloc where I try to shrink the space he's telling me: Address .... is 0 bytes inside a block of size 56000, But I know i need only this space so why is there a write over space error :S??
I have a .txt file which I want to read from and then write a new text file, this time with sorted lines. It is easy to sort one value, but what about sorting entire lines based on one value?
I want to sort the lines based on the FIRST value.
I have an external file with one column of data. If I have a counter value let say counter =1, and counter++ and so on. How I can write such a c++ code that if the value of counter and value from the external file are same then generate an action let say cout both values i.e. value of counter and value from external file.
for more information, here is an example:
data in file(in one column): 2 6 8 9 10... value of counter : 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9...
then cout values only if value of counter and value from the file is same.
Here is my code so far, but it does not seem to work;
#include<iostream> #include<fstream> using namespace std; int main() { const int SIZE = 10; //Size declaration of array int hours[SIZE]; //Array declaration
I am reading my file (20GB) line by line using boost like this
PHP Code:
boost::interprocess::file_mapping* fm = new boost::interprocess::file_mapping("E:Mountain.7z", boost::interprocess::read_only); boost::interprocess::mapped_region* mr = new boost::interprocess::mapped_region(*fm, boost::interprocess::read_only);
I'm using fgets which will read a single line at a time, but unlike fgets I don't want it to return the new line char ( ) ?I want to be able to use printf to display the lines next to each other.
I need to read lines from one file and copy them line by line into another file using dynamic memory allocation. It compiles but gives me a seg fault. Why/How?
As, it can be seen from the above structure that whitespaces are not same everytime. So, to deal with this situation, i am using boost library to remove all whitespaces from the line which is being read and then try to find the name of gate and its input. My code is given below which is able to correctly find the gate names and its first input...but my code is not able to find the second, third and so on input names.
I have been working on a program to scanfile and whenever it encounters what the user wanted it prints it, and it is all right less the first line of the file that the program jumps,
I am making a script to read the latest from a text file. It picks up the line by numbytes in fseek, but the data line may vary and numbytes not be accurate, how can I fix this?
And another problem is that the line has, date, time, value, separated by space, how to read that line and put these 3 information in variable?
#include <stdio.h> #include <conio.h> int main() { FILE *arq; char Line[100]; char *result; int tam, i; // Opens a file for READING TEXT arq = fopen("temp.txt", "rt");
I want to read a binary file using as line separator "ff77" in order to parse further each line one by one with some regex since the file is big. I have a small ruby code shown below, but I'm new in C++, and I don't know how to replicate in C++ what this ruby code does.
Code: #!/usr/bin/env ruby BEGIN{ $/="xffx77" } # Line separator = FF77 File.open(ARGV[0],"rb") # Open in binary mode
I run with debugger and appear this file referring the error to line 142 (in red):
Code: /*** *xtoa.c - convert integers/longs to ASCII string * * The module has code to convert integers/longs to ASCII strings. See * *******************************************************************************/
Code: =>msvcr110d.dll!xtoa_s(unsigned long val, char * buf, unsigned int sizeInTChars, unsigned int radix, int is_neg) Line 142C msvcr110d.dll!_itoa_s(int val, char * buf, unsigned int sizeInTChars, int radix) Line 176C Get_Blocks.exe!main(int argc, char * * argv) Line 224C++ Get_Blocks.exe!__tmainCRTStartup() Line 536C Get_Blocks.exe!mainCRTStartup() Line 377C kernel32.dll!7695336a()Unknown
[Frames below may be incorrect and/or missing, no symbols loaded for kernel32.dll] ntdll.dll!76f19f72()Unknown ntdll.dll!76f19f45()Unknown
It seems could be becuase to _itoa_s(), I'm using like this:
Code: _itoa_s(CONVDEC(i), num, 10, 10); sub += num;
How to read a file line by line and then later access them by doing something like
Code: lines[0] //Line number one ... lines[100] //Line number one hundred and one lines[100][0] //L lines[100][1] //i lines[100][2] //n lines[100][3] //e lines[100][4] // lines[100][5] //n ...
I build this function in my C++ code. I run the on a UNIX box, build HTML file to use in Windows.
In HTML file building code, I have only a string variable hold the contents of this text file (from unix) & add it into HTML file.
The issue is that when I view the HTML file on windows, it shows all the lines in the text file as one line. I think it lost the CRLF.
My question is when I add lines from text file (reading one line at a time) in UNIX, how do I maintain CRLF ( ) in the stringstream variable so that it will display on HTML in Windows properly, all the lines as it is in unix.
When I read a text file. I'm reading a list of strings in text file, with one string per line. The first line has extra characters in the string, the rest of the lines read are fine, and I can't understand where the extra characters come from. The file format is this...
I have written the following code but i am stuck. Write a program that will prompt the user for a file name and open that file for reading. Print out all the information in the file, numbering each new line of text.
Code: #include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> #include <conio.h> #include <ctype.h> int main() { char line[81], filename[21], c; int i = 1; FILE *inFile;
I wrote the below code to find the line with "abc" as my parameter to strTosearch. I expected to the line 1st line but, this function always match the 2nd line. What am I missing here?
I wanted "found" to be "abc def hgi SSS".
Code in main() String found=GetstringColSamLine("mytext.txt", "abc");
The objective: Open and read a CSV file one line at a time using SQL commands.
The problem: I am getting an error that I have a feeling may not point to the "real" problem.
Where I may have syntax or other errors in code.
stInputConn = "Provider=Microsoft.jet.OLEDB.4.0;Data Source=V:\IT\RE\Exports\;Extended Properties="text;HDR=YES;Format=Delimited(,)""; OleDbConnection cn = new OleDbConnection(stInputConn); stInputFileName = ConfigurationManager.AppSettings.Get("InputFile"); // the input file name is CSV_DataExport.CSV
[Code] .....
The last line (ExecuteReader) is where I get the OleDb Exception.