Reputation: 125
I want my program to read a text file all characters 1 by 1 and whereever it finds a double-quote ("), it adds a semicolon before that inverted comma. For eg we have a paragraph in a text file as follow:
This is a paragraph which conains lots and lots of characters and some names and dates. My name "Sam" i was born at "12:00" "noon". I live in "anyplace" .
Now I want the output to be as follows:
This is a paragraph which conains lots and lots of characters and some names and dates. My name ;"Sam;" i was born at ;"12:00;" ;"noon;". I live in ;"anyplace;" .
It should open the file using file stream then reads character and then adds semicolon where it finds quotes. And the output should be equal to textbox1.Text.
This is my code:
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.IO;
namespace ConsoleApplication1
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
char ch;
int Tchar = 0;
StreamReader reader;
reader = new StreamReader(@"C:\Users\user1\Documents\data.txt");
do
{
ch = (char)reader.Read();
Console.Write(ch);
if (Convert.ToInt32(ch) == 34)
{
Console.Write(@";");
}
Tchar++;
} while (!reader.EndOfStream);
reader.Close();
reader.Dispose();
Console.WriteLine(" ");
Console.WriteLine(Tchar.ToString() + " characters");
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
}
This is the output:
This is a paragraph which conains lots and lots of characters and some names and dates. My name ";Sam"; i was born at ";12:00"; ";noon";. I live in ";anyplace"; . 154 characters
I want that semicolon before the quotes. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks!
Upvotes: 12
Views: 44076
Reputation: 1
using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Text;
namespace getto
{
class Program
{
static void Main(string[] args)
{
var path = @"C:\Users\VASANTH14122018\Desktop\file.v";
string content = File.ReadAllText(path, Encoding.UTF8);
Console.WriteLine(content);
//string helloWorld = "Hello, world!";
foreach(char c in content)
{
Console.WriteLine(c);
}
Console.Write("Press any key to continue . . . ");
Console.ReadKey(true);
}
}
}
Upvotes: -1
Reputation: 2335
Do you have to read in character by character? The following code will do the whole thing as a block and return you a list containing all your lines.
var contents = File.ReadAllLines (@"C:\Users\user1\Documents\data.txt")
.Select (l => l.Replace ("\"", ";\""));
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 1491
Try ch = (char)reader.Peek();
This will read tell you the next character without reading it. You can then use this to check if it is a " or not an insert : accordingly
if (Convert.ToInt32((char)read.Peek()) == 34) Console.Write(@";")
Upvotes: 1
Reputation: 360602
Swap the order of the operations:
if (Convert.ToInt32(ch) == 34)
{
Console.Write(@";");
}
Console.Write(ch);
e.g. don't write the original character until AFTER you've decided to output a semicolon or not.
Upvotes: 7