I have this code:
string a = "D:\\Users\\user-pc\\Desktop\\testing\\a.txt";
ifstream f;
/*edit*/ string line;
/*edit*/ getline(f, line);
f.open(a);
if ( f.eof() )
cout << "ended";
else
cout << "nope"
and the file 'a.txt' which has nothing in it.
the output is nope, alway nope. I don't get it.. Do I use it wrong?
EDIT: still .eof() not working
This function only reports the stream state as set by the most recent I/O operation, it does not examine the associated data source.
In other words, you need to try to read first, then you can evaluate the state.f.get()
and then checkf.eof()
- then it would betrue
. But then also, if file would not be empty, the firstchar
would be thrown away. To do what you really intend, you could useif ((f.rdbuf()->in_avail()) == 0)
. So you can really check how many chars are in the file without extracting them.getline
on the file.