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How to read a line from a text file in c/c++? [duplicate]

This question already has answers here: How do I read long lines from a text file in C++? (3 answers) Closed 9 years ago.

After exhaustive googling and visiting many forums, I am yet to find a good comprehensive answer for this question. A lot of the forums suggest using the get line istream& getline (char* s, streamsize n ) function. My question is what if I don't know what the length of each line is and cannot predict what the size may be? Also what is it's equivalent in C?

Is there any specific function in c /c++ to read one single line each time from a text file ?

Explanation , with Code snippets will he开发者_开发百科lp me a lot.


In C++, you can use the global function std::getline, it takes a string and a stream and an optional delimiter and reads 1 line until the delimiter specified is reached. An example:

#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <fstream>

int main() {
    std::ifstream input("filename.txt");
    std::string line;

    while( std::getline( input, line ) ) {
        std::cout<<line<<'\n';
    }

    return 0;
}

This program reads each line from a file and echos it to the console.

For C you're probably looking at using fgets, it has been a while since I used C, meaning I'm a bit rusty, but I believe you can use this to emulate the functionality of the above C++ program like so:

#include <stdio.h>

int main() {
    char line[1024];
    FILE *fp = fopen("filename.txt","r");

    //Checks if file is empty
    if( fp == NULL ) {                       
        return 1;
    }

    while( fgets(line,1024,fp) ) {
        printf("%s\n",line);
    }

    return 0;
}

With the limitation that the line can not be longer than the maximum length of the buffer that you're reading in to.


In c, you could use fopen, and getch. Usually, if you can't be exactly sure of the length of the longest line, you could allocate a large buffer (e.g. 8kb) and almost be guaranteed of getting all lines.

If there's a chance you may have really really long lines and you have to process line by line, you could malloc a resonable buffer, and use realloc to double it's size each time you get close to filling it.

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

void handle_line(char *line) {
  printf("%s", line);
}

int main(int argc, char *argv[]) {
    int size = 1024, pos;
    int c;
    char *buffer = (char *)malloc(size);

    FILE *f = fopen("myfile.txt", "r");
    if(f) {
      do { // read all lines in file
        pos = 0;
        do{ // read one line
          c = fgetc(f);
          if(c != EOF) buffer[pos++] = (char)c;
          if(pos >= size - 1) { // increase buffer length - leave room for 0
            size *=2;
            buffer = (char*)realloc(buffer, size);
          }
        }while(c != EOF && c != '\n');
        buffer[pos] = 0;
        // line is now in buffer
        handle_line(buffer);
      } while(c != EOF); 
      fclose(f);           
    }
    free(buffer);
    return 0;
}


In C, fgets(), and you need to know the maximum size to prevent truncation.


im not really that good at C , but i believe this code should get you complete single line till the end...

 #include<stdio.h>

 int main()   
{      
  char line[1024];    
  FILE *f=fopen("filename.txt","r");    
  fscanf(*f,"%[^\n]",line);    
  printf("%s",line);    
 }    


getline() is what you're looking for. You use strings in C++, and you don't need to know the size ahead of time.

Assuming std namespace:

 ifstream file1("myfile.txt");
 string stuff;

 while (getline(file1, stuff, '\n')) {
      cout << stuff << endl;
 }

 file1.close();
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