4

Is there a C# library that provides the functionality of ">>" and "<<" for IO in C++? It was really convenient for console apps. Granted not a lot of console apps are in C#, but some of us use it for them.

I know about Console.Read[Line]|Write[Line] and Streams|FileStream|StreamReader|StreamWriter thats not part of the question.

I dont think im specific enough

int a,b;
cin >> a >> b;

IS AMAZING!!

string input = Console.ReadLine();
string[] data = input.split( ' ' );
a = Convert.ToInt32( data[0] );
b = Convert.ToInt32( data[1] );

... long winded enough? Plus there are other reasons why the C# solution is worse. I must get the entire line or make my own buffer for it. If the line im working on is IDK say the 1000 line of Bells Triangle, I waste so much time reading everything at one time.

EDIT: GAR!!!

OK THE PROBLEM!!!

Using IntX to do HUGE number like the .net 4.0 BigInteger to produce the bell triangle. If you know the bell triangle it gets freaking huge very very quickly. The whole point of this question is that I need to deal with each number individually. If you read an entire line, you could easily hit Gigs of data. This is kinda the same as digits of Pi. For Example 42pow1048576 is 1.6 MB! I don't have time nor memory to read all the numbers as one string then pick the one I want

4
  • I don't see what the problem is. C#'s approach may be more verbose, but it's a lot more sensible, allows for much finer control over what you're doing, and makes error handling much easier. Also, it's not an abusive use of an operator (overriding an operator just to make IO operations a little easier to type is wrong). Feb 23, 2010 at 23:14
  • Well, you could begin with merging the first two lines to: var data = Console.ReadLine().split(' '); Then you can probably add ConvertAll() on that to get ints, but I dont know the syntax weel enough to dare to write it here. Feb 23, 2010 at 23:16
  • @Will Vousden: "C# offers much finer control over what you're doing"? Uhm, I don't agree to that.. Feb 23, 2010 at 23:17
  • Buffer? Like 2 GBs? 'cause an Int32 won't take more than 100 digits.
    – user76035
    Feb 23, 2010 at 23:18

7 Answers 7

4

No, and I wouldn't. C# != C++

You should try your best to stick with the language convention of whatever language you are working in.

4
  • To be fair, Console.WriteLine is nothing else than writing to the Console.Out stream.
    – user76035
    Feb 23, 2010 at 22:57
  • Now see this is one place I think C# EPIC FAILS! C# IO makes it easy to read straight up binary values, kinda hard to read real text. Feb 23, 2010 at 23:02
  • @Buttink: I'm not sure what you mean by "hard to read real text". Console.Read/Write is textual, since Console.Out and Console.In are TextReader/Writers. Do you mean it's hard to read a textual int or word? Feb 23, 2010 at 23:06
  • System.IO.File.ReadAllText("filename.txt") isn't that bad either '_
    – user76035
    Feb 23, 2010 at 23:13
1

I think I get what you are after: simple, default formatted input. I think the reason there is no TextReader.ReadXXX() is that this is parsing, and parsing is hard: for example: should ReadFloat():

  • ignore leading whitespace
  • require decimal point
  • require trailing whitespace (123abc)
  • handle exponentials (12.3a3 parses differently to 12.4e5?)

Not to mention what the heck does ReadString() do? From C++, you would expect "read to the next whitespace", but the name doesn't say that.

Now all of these have good sensible answers, and I agree C# (or rather, the BCL) should provide them, but I can certainly understand why they would choose to not provide fragile, nearly impossible to use correctly, functions right there on a central class.

EDIT: For the buffering problem, an ugly solution is:

static class TextReaderEx {
    static public string ReadWord(this TextReader reader) {
        int c;
        // Skip leading whitespace
        while (-1 != (c = reader.Peek()) && char.IsWhiteSpace((char)c)) reader.Read();
        // Read to next whitespace
        var result = new StringBuilder();
        while (-1 != (c = reader.Peek()) && !char.IsWhiteSpace((char)c)) {
            reader.Read();
            result.Append((char)c);
        }
        return result.ToString();
    }
}

...
    int.Parse(Console.In.ReadWord())
2
1

Nope. You're stuck with Console.WriteLine. You could create a wrapper that offered this functionality, though.

5
  • Well, Console.Out is a Stream ;)
    – user76035
    Feb 23, 2010 at 22:51
  • Actually, you couldn't create such a wrapper... I just tried : when overriding the << and >> operators, the second parameter must be an int :S Feb 23, 2010 at 23:24
  • 1
    @wwosik : no it's not... it's a TextWriter Feb 23, 2010 at 23:26
  • @Thomas - yes, you're right and since it's programming better be precise ;) Though TextWriter and a console stream are very similar in meaning
    – user76035
    Feb 23, 2010 at 23:39
  • 1
    @wwosik: TextWriter is strings. Stream is bytes. Big difference. Feb 23, 2010 at 23:48
1

You can Use Console.WriteLine , Console.ReadLine ..For the purpose.Both are in System NameSpace.

1

You have System.IO.Stream(Reader|Writer) And for console: Console.Write, Console.Read

0

Not that I know of. If you are interested of the chaining outputs you can use System.Text.StringBuilder. http://msdn.microsoft.com/en-us/library/system.text.stringbuilder(VS.71).aspx

StringBuilder builder = new StringBuilder();
builder.Append("hello").Append(" world!");
Console.WriteLine(builder.ToString());

Perhaps not as pretty as C++, but as another poster states, C# != C++.

0

This is not even possible in C#, no matter how hard you try:

  1. The left hand side and right hand side of operators is always passed by value; this rules out the possibility of cin.
  2. The right hand side of << and >> must be an integer; this rules out cout.

The first point is to make sure operator overloading is a little less messy than in C++ (debatable, but it surely makes things a lot simpler), and the second point was specifically chosen to rule out C++'s cin and cout way of dealing with IO, IIRC.

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