1

In this program, I'm supposed to read the program line by line, and then use some functions that were given to me that will extract a portion of the string and send it to another function. I'm having a problem with reading the file and 'storing' th

void histogram(const int MaxPages, istream& input, ostream& output)
{
CountedLocation *array[MaxPages];
int linenum = 0;

string temp;
//getline(input, linestring);
//output << linestring;
while (linenum < MaxPages)
{
   string linestring = "";
   getline(input, linestring);
   //linenum++;
   extractTheRequest(linestring);
   if (isAGet(linestring) == true)
   {
       extractLocator(linestring);
       linenum++;
       output << linestring << endl;
       output << "test1";
   }
   linenum++;
}

The problem seems to be that the program never really "reads" the file. I tried having linestring initialized right below the initializion of string temp, as "string linestring = "f" ". The program would of course output the text file as several 'f's strung together. I tried looking on how to read it line by line, but the majority do not use istream, and I am not allowed to edit anything outside of the histogram function. Nothing in the if statement regarding "isAGet" ever really 'occurs'.

My problem is; how do I read the text file line by line, and then store each line into a string? I thought maybe I could just do it in a loop like I have below, storing the line into a temporary stream, doing what I need with it, and then clearing the stream to repeat the process. Is there another approach that would be easier? I can't figure it out on my own.

4
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    so what is isAGet? And are you sure the file opened?
    – doctorlove
    Oct 24, 2013 at 15:03
  • isAGet is a bool that checks whether or not the string parsed to it has a certain set of characters in it ('GET'). And I'm fairly certain the file is open when the program runs. The histogram function is located in histogram.cpp, but the program starts in counthits.cpp. I honestly do not understand how counthits counts, but in the main, it (presumably) takes the 3 parameters that are required when the program starts (maxPages, input file, output file), followed by the code (ifstream in (argv[2]); (ofstream out (argv[3]);) It then calls histogram, and then there's in.close and out.close.
    – JC2112
    Oct 24, 2013 at 15:08
  • When debugging, always try to isolate where the problem is. Based on what you've said, the very first thing to do here is to comment out every line after getline(input, linestring); and before linenum++; and add a cerr << linestring; to check that it is actually reading the lines in the file. Have you done this? Oct 24, 2013 at 15:34
  • 1
    Your code isn’t valid C++ – you cannot declare a C-array in this fashion, you need to use a std::vector. Oct 24, 2013 at 15:42

2 Answers 2

1

The code should look like this:

void histogram(const int MaxPages, istream& input, ostream& output) {
    if (!input.good()) {
        cerr << "File doesn't exist" << endl;
        return;
    }

    string line;
    for (int line_no = 0; getline(input, line); ++line_no) {
        output << '"' << line << '"' << endl;
    }
}

Mention those quotes put to console. They're to show that in case your file has an empty last line, getline will return an error, and work_with_that_line won't get called. It's a wide known problem with getline-style file input. In case you care, consider using char-by-char or binary input.

8
  • 1
    This would work normally, but I can't have a int main in this project; everything must be within the void histogram function. Additionally, we're not allowed to have the inclusions of <iostream> or <fstream>
    – JC2112
    Oct 24, 2013 at 15:20
  • In case you have some streams passed to your code, it shouldn't be a problem. Fixed my answer for that. Can you add a <string>? Oct 24, 2013 at 15:27
  • <string> is preincluded, so yes. I can't declare another function though, so I wouldn't be able to create void work_with_that_line.
    – JC2112
    Oct 24, 2013 at 15:30
  • That's up to you to declare that function or not. Just write the code you need instead of the call to that function. Oct 24, 2013 at 15:36
  • Ok, I tried implementing your code, and the program compiles, but regardless of what file I give it via the command parameters, it says that the file does not exist. Maybe it's something with the input stream. Histogram is given istream& input, I don't know if that helps. I don't understand file reading in general.
    – JC2112
    Oct 24, 2013 at 15:45
1

Not sure what your isAGet and extractTheRequest does but to answer "how do I read the text file line by line, and then store each line into a string"

Why not simply this ?

std::vector<std::string> vec;
while ( std::getline(input, linestring) && (linenum < MaxPages ) )
{
  //...
  //Store into std::vector, if required
  vec.push_back(linestring); 

  //.. use other calls 
  output << linestring ;
  linenum++;
}
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  • This doesn't work because "vector is not a member of 'std'". I should have included this in my question, but we're only given #include "histogram.h", #include "arrayUtils.h", and #include <string>. We can't add any more inclusions.
    – JC2112
    Oct 24, 2013 at 15:10
  • @JoJoBya vector is not a member of 'std huh ? Don't use vector then, process it within loop each linestring
    – P0W
    Oct 24, 2013 at 15:12
  • I don't entirely understand. I declared string linestring, and then I added while (std::getline(input, linestring) && (linenum < MaxPages)) { output << "test"; } And there was no output written to the text file. If I were to add the line output << "test2" above the while loop, it displays, but not within the loop. I'm very confused, I think the file is already open, but I think my program is acting as if it isn't open.
    – JC2112
    Oct 24, 2013 at 15:17
  • Ignore the last part of my above comment. I tried doing just a while loop with only (linenum < MaxPages), and that displays fine. It's something with the getline conditional that's in that while statement that makes it not work. I don't think it's getting the line.
    – JC2112
    Oct 24, 2013 at 15:27
  • @JoJoBya okay so how are you calling your histogram ?. I guess your input stream is in bad state. Are your sure file can be read successfully with input ? Before calling histogram, try reading the input stream
    – P0W
    Oct 24, 2013 at 15:37

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