As a start, you might want to take some shortcuts in the way you write the loop over lines in order to make it clearer. Here is the conventional "read line at a time" loop using C++ iostreams:
#include <fstream>
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
int main ( int, char ** )
{
std::ifstream file("sample.html");
if ( !file.is_open() ) {
std::cerr << "Failed to open file." << std::endl;
return (EXIT_FAILURE);
}
for ( std::string line; (std::getline(file,line)); )
{
// process line.
}
}
As for the inner part the processes the line, there are several problems.
- It doesn't compile. I suppose this is what you meant with "I cant get it works". When asking a question, this is the kind of information you might want to provide in order to get good help.
- There is confusion between variable names
temp
and tempString
etc.
string::find()
returns a large positive integer to indicate invalid positions (the size_type
is unsigned), so you will always enter the loop unless a match is found starting at character position 0
, in which case you probably do want to enter the loop.
Here is a simple test content for sample.html
.
<html>
<a href="foo.pdf"/>
</html>
Sticking the following inside the loop:
if ((line.find("href=") != std::string::npos) &&
(line.find(".pdf" ) != std::string::npos))
{
const std::size_t start_pos = line.find("href");
std::string temp = line.substr(start_pos+6);
const std::size_t stop_pos = temp.find("\"");
std::string result = temp.substr(0, stop_pos);
std::cout << "'" << result << "'" << std::endl;
}
I actually get the output
'foo.pdf'
However, as Jerry pointed out, you might not want to use this in a production environment. If this is a simple homework or exercise on how to use the <string>
, <iostream>
and <fstream>
libraries, then go ahead with such a procedure.
sample.html
file?start_str
?temp
?tempString
? Don't ask people to analyze fake code, post the code that fails.