int listFiles(const string& addDir, vector<string> &list, const std::string& _ext) {
DIR *dir = 0;
struct dirent *entrada = 0;
int isFile = 32768;
std::string ext("." + _ext);
for (string::size_type i = 0; i < ext.length(); ++i)
ext[i] = tolower(ext[i]);
dir = opendir(addDir.c_str());
if (dir == 0) {
cerr << "Could not open the directory." << endl;
exit(1);
}
while (entrada = readdir(dir))
if (entrada->d_type == isFile)
{
const char *name = entrada->d_name;
size_t len = strlen(entrada->d_name);
if (len >= ext.length()) {
std::string fext(name + len - ext.length());
for (string::size_type i = 0; i < fext.length(); ++i)
fext[i] = tolower(fext[i]);
if (fext == ext) {
list.push_back(entrada->d_name);
cout << entrada->d_name << endl;
}
}
}
closedir(dir);
return 0;
}
int main()
{
vector<string> flist;
listFiles("c:\\", flist, "csv");
system("PAUSE");
}
If you want to use FindNextFile, msdn has an example for enumerating all fiels in a directory here which you can adapt.
EDIT: To expand on the windows API method:
argv
is of type TCHAR*
, meaning either char*
or wchar_t*
depending on #ifdef UNICODE
. It's a type used by all Windows API calls which take a string parameter. To create a TCHAR
literal you can use TEXT("text")
. To create a wchar_t
literal you can use L"text"
. If you do not want to use TCHAR semantics you can redefine main
to be of type int main(int argc, char* argv)
, or int wmain(int argc, wchar_t* arv)
. Converting between the two types involves dealing with unicode and code pages, which you should probably use a 3rd party library for.
Converting from ASCII (std::string
or char*
with char points in 0-127) to unicode(std::wstring
or wchar_t*
is a simple matter of creating a std::wstring(std::string.cbegin(), std::string.cend())
.
Here is a code example demonstrating use of WinAPI functions to list files in a directory:
#include <windows.h>
#incldue <string>
#include <iostream>
#ifdef UNICODE
typedef std::wstring tstring;
#else
typedef std::string tstring;
#endif
#ifdef UNICODE
std::wostream& tcout = std::wcout;
std::wostream& tcerr = std::wcerr;
#else
std::ostream& tcout = std::cout;
std::ostream& tcerr = std::cerr;
#endif
int listFiles(const tstring& directory, std::vector<tstring> &list, const tstring& extension)
{
using std::endl;
WIN32_FIND_DATA file;
HANDLE hListing;
int error;
tstring query;
if (directory.length() > MAX_PATH - 2 - extension.length())
tcerr << "directory name too long" << endl;
query = directory + TEXT("*.") + extension;
hListing = FindFirstFile(query.c_str(), &file);
if (hListing == INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE) {
error = GetLastError();
if (error == ERROR_FILE_NOT_FOUND)
tcout << "no ." << extension << " files found in directory " << directory << endl;
return error;
}
do
{
if ((file.dwFileAttributes & FILE_ATTRIBUTE_DIRECTORY) == 0)
{
tcout << file.cFileName << endl;
list.push_back(file.cFileName);
}
} while (FindNextFile(hListing, &file) != 0);
error = GetLastError();
if (error == ERROR_NO_MORE_FILES)
error = 0;
FindClose(hListing);
return error;
}
int _tmain(int argc, TCHAR* argv[])
{
std::vector<tstring> files;
listFiles(TEXT("C:\\"), files, TEXT("sys"));
if (argc > 1)
listFiles(argv[1], files, TEXT("csv"));
}
If you want to simplify it, you can make your application either locked in unicode or completely ignorant of unicode by removing all T (TCHAR, TEXT(), the newly-defined tstring, tcout, tcerr) variants and using purely wide or non-wide types (ie. char*, string, simple literals, cout OR wchar_t*, wstring, L"" literals, wcout).
If you do this, you need to use the specialied functions of WINAPI functions (i.e. FindFirstFileA for non-wide and FindFirstFileW for wide)
FindFirstFile
andFindNextFile
. If you can't get it to work then you should have posted a question with that code.32768
is correct, that depends, and might differ between platforms.