Reputation: 11022
I'm trying to understand the answer provided here, but I can't seem to make it work.
Here is what I've tried:
#include <algorithm>
#include <iostream>
#include <iterator>
#include <vector>
#include <fstream>
int main()
{
std::string path("numbersfile");
std::vector<int> myVector{1,16,32,64};
std::vector<int> newVector{};
std::ofstream FILE(path,std::ios::out | std::ofstream::binary);
std::copy(myVector.begin(),myVector.end(),std::ostreambuf_iterator<char>(FILE));
std::ifstream INFILE(path,std::ios::in | std::ifstream::binary);
std::istreambuf_iterator<char> iter(INFILE);
//std::copy(iter.begin(),iter.end(),std::back_inserter(newVector)); //this doesn't compile
std::copy(iter,std::istreambuf_iterator<char>{},std::back_inserter(newVector)); // this leaves newVector empty
}
newVector
is still empty after the last copy
. How could the last statement be updated to populate newVector
?
Upvotes: 7
Views: 7203
Reputation: 11022
The file is not ready to be read by the time the second copy
is called. (Thanks to Piotr Skotnicki for his answer in the comments)
A call to flush
allows the program to work:
#include <algorithm>
#include <iostream>
#include <iterator>
#include <vector>
#include <fstream>
int main()
{
std::string path("numbersfile");
std::vector<int> myVector{1,16,32,64};
std::vector<int> newVector{};
std::ofstream FILE(path,std::ios::out | std::ofstream::binary);
std::copy(myVector.begin(),myVector.end(),std::ostreambuf_iterator<char>(FILE));
FILE.flush(); // required here
std::ifstream INFILE(path,std::ios::in | std::ifstream::binary);
std::istreambuf_iterator<char> iter(INFILE);
//std::copy(iter.begin(),iter.end(),std::back_inserter(newVector)); //this doesn't compile
std::copy(iter,std::istreambuf_iterator<char>{},std::back_inserter(newVector)); // this leaves newVector empty
return 0;
}
The ofstream
is still in scope when the ifstream
is created. Had the ofstream
's destructor been called then the file would also have been ready for the ifstream
. In the following program the ifstream
is automatically destructed:
#include <algorithm>
#include <fstream>
#include <iterator>
#include <vector>
std::string filename("numbersfile");
std::vector<double> myVector{1.342, 16.33, 32.1, 12364};
void write_vector_to_file(const std::vector<double>& myVector, std::string filename);
std::vector<double> read_vector_from_file(std::string filename);
int main()
{
write_vector_to_file(myVector, filename);
auto newVector{read_vector_from_file(filename)};
return 0;
}
void write_vector_to_file(const std::vector<double>& myVector, std::string filename)
{
std::ofstream ofs(filename, std::ios::out | std::ofstream::binary);
std::ostream_iterator<double> osi{ofs," "};
std::copy(myVector.begin(), myVector.end(), osi);
}
std::vector<double> read_vector_from_file(std::string filename)
{
std::vector<double> newVector{};
std::ifstream ifs(filename, std::ios::in | std::ifstream::binary);
std::istream_iterator<double> iter{ifs};
std::istream_iterator<double> end{};
std::copy(iter, end, std::back_inserter(newVector));
return newVector;
}
Upvotes: 14
Reputation: 475
There are a number of flaws in your code:
you define a variable named FILE
THIS IS BAD BAD BAD. FILE
is a name of an already existing object, it's comparable to naming an instance of a vector
as: std::vector<int>array{}
.
Not only is it confusing it's extremely dangerous as it will almost certainty lead to naming clashes. Plus, all capitol names should be reserved for macros.
you never check if the file is actually opened, if it isn't the compiler will not warn you and the stream will not give any indication of failure (unless explicitly checked). So, you should always check. The simplest way is too use the streams boolean operator:
if (!ifile) throw std::runtime_error("error opening file");
you wrote that this doesn't compile:
std::copy(iter.begin(),iter.end(),std::back_inserter(newVector));
Why would this work? Iterators themselves don't have begin
and end
functions, the objects associated with the iterator have those methods.
Piecing all that together here is a modified version of your code:
{
std::string path("numbersfile");
std::vector<int> myVector{ 1,16,32,64 };
std::vector<int> newVector{};
std::ofstream outfile(path, std::ios_base::binary);
std::copy(myVector.begin(), myVector.end(), std::ostreambuf_iterator<char>(outfile));
outfile.close();
std::ifstream infile(path,std::ios_base::binary);
std::istreambuf_iterator<char> iter(infile);
std::copy(iter, std::istreambuf_iterator<char>(), std::back_inserter(newVector)); // this leaves newVector empty
infile.close(); // close explicilty for consistency
}
Upvotes: 8