0

I have an array of floats that I want to output to a file in binary. My relevant code is as follows:

    FILE *binFile;

    binFile = fopen(fileName, "wb");

    if (binFile)
    {
          fwrite(completeList, sizeof(float), size, binFile);
    }

Now, completeList is a pointer to an array of floats I was talking about, and size is another parameter I'm passing it indicating how many elements there are.

When this is outputted to a binary file, opening that file shows a bunch of random ASCII characters. I know this is what I should expect, but when I put it through a hex editor it shows random crap.

What am I doing wrong?

EDIT:

My parsing code:

    FILE *bofFile = fopen(file, "rb");

    if(bofFile)
    {
        float *tempArray;

        fseek(bofFile, 0, SEEK_END);

        unsigned long int size = ftell(bofFile) / sizeof(float);

        tempArray = (float *)malloc(size);

        fread(tempArray, sizeof(float), size, bofFile);

        std::cout << tempArray[0];
    }
9
  • 3
    float numbers ARE random ascii crap when you view the raw bytes. they don't look like "numbers" because a standard float number's internal field divisions don't line up on normal 8bit/byte boundaries.
    – Marc B
    Sep 27, 2012 at 3:30
  • 2
    how do you know it is random? Sep 27, 2012 at 3:30
  • I'm putting it through a hex editor and that shows me it's not anything meaningful.
    – Tassos S
    Sep 27, 2012 at 3:34
  • 3
    Can you interpret IEEE 1394 floats by eye? Can you tell that 40490fdb is pi?
    – nneonneo
    Sep 27, 2012 at 3:35
  • 1
    What do you expect to see in your hex editor?
    – Kevin
    Sep 27, 2012 at 3:51

2 Answers 2

2

Don't know if this is related, but you have a fairly serious problem here:

tempArray = malloc(size);

You should change that to prevent buffer overrun:

tempArray = malloc(size * sizeof(float));

Oh, and you also forgot to seek back to the start of the file before reading (that would be why it's "giving you nothing"):

fseek(bofFile, 0, SEEK_SET);
2
0

How is your input file formatted? Your code assumes that it too will look 'random' when viewed in a text editor. Have you tried displaying the entire array, to ensure you are reading the data from the input file correctly? Also, you have a malloc() problem that someone else pointed out.

The binary representation of the IEEE floating point format is not intuitive, and it will look like random data.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.