2

Is it possible to provide a root folder and after this only relative paths for std::ifstream and std::ofstream?

For example:

SetFileStreamRootFolder("C:/");
std::ifstream stream("isample.txt"); //C:\isample.txt file
std::ofstream stream("osample.txt"); //C:\osample.txt file

3 Answers 3

2

If you write a function, yes.
The fstream-objects do not impose anything on you, you can specify a relative path or an absolute path.

Cplusplus.com states:

Parameters:
filename

String with the name of the file to open.
Specifics about its format and validity 
depend on the library implementation and running environment.
2

You can define your own method which knows the working directory and prepends the correct string to the filename.

std::string prependFilePath(const std::string &filename);

Then construct a stream with

stream(prependFilePath("isample.txt").c_str());

Example:

std::string prependFilePath(const std::string &filename)
{
    // The path can be relative or absolute
    return "../" + filename;
}

In a real implementation, you should store the path (e.g.: ../) in a const std::string member rather than hard-coding it and probably this method is a good candidate for getting a static modifier (real helper/utility method).

2

Sure, using Boost.Filesystem

#include <boost/filesystem.hpp>
...
namespace fs = boost::filesystem;
fs::current_path("C:/");

Filesystem, or something like it, is slated for inclusion in the standard library. VS2012 includes a preliminary implementation of it. So if you don't have Boost, and you don't feel like installing it, you can use that.

#include <filesystem>
...
namespace fs = std::tr2::sys;
fs::current_path(fs::path("C:/"));
1
  • Thanks for adding the information about the tr2 implementation. Apr 28, 2013 at 17:43

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

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