Reputation: 46467
I would like to open a file and read a line from it. There will be only one line in the file so I don't really need to worry about looping, although for future reference it would be nice to know how to read multiple lines.
int main(int argc, const char* argv[]) {
// argv[1] holds the file name from the command prompt
int number = 0; // number must be positive!
// create input file stream and open file
ifstream ifs;
ifs.open(argv[1]);
if (ifs == NULL) {
// Unable to open file
exit(1);
} else {
// file opened
// read file and get number
...?
// done using file, close it
ifs.close();
}
}
How would I do this? Also, am I handling the file open correctly in terms of successful open?
Thanks.
Upvotes: 2
Views: 21320
Reputation: 361556
A couple of things:
You can read a number with the >>
stream extraction operator: ifs >> number
.
The standard library function getline will read a line from a file, if you want a full line of text.
To check if the file opened, just write if (ifs)
or if (!ifs)
. Leave out the == NULL
.
You don't need to explicitly close the file at the end. That will happen automatically when the ifs
variable goes out of scope.
Revised code:
if (!ifs) {
// Unable to open file.
} else if (ifs >> number) {
// Read the number.
} else {
// Failed to read number.
}
Upvotes: 5
Reputation: 984
For what you're doing here, simply:
ifs >> number;
Will extract a number from the stream and store it in 'number'.
Looping, depends on the content. If it was all numbers, something like:
int x = 0;
while (ifs >> numbers[x] && x < MAX_NUMBERS)
{
ifs >> number[x];
x++;
}
Would work to store a series of numbers in an array. This works because extraction operator's side effect is true if the extraction succeeds, or false if it fails (due to end of file or disk errors, etc.)
Upvotes: 1