# New line character in c#

I wrote this code to count the number of characters in a text file :

sr.BaseStream.Position = 0;
int Ccount = 0;
while (sr.Peek() != -1)
{
Ccount++;
}


but after applying this code to a file contains :

1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
0


Ccount = 30 ???? why? I am using Windows Xp on virtual box on my Macbook the program used : Microsoft Visual Basic 2010.

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Character + return + new line = 3 characters per line = 3 * 10 = 30 in total. –  John Willemse Apr 15 '13 at 13:58
10 chars + 10 carriage returns + 10 line feeds? ?\r\n –  Alex K. Apr 15 '13 at 13:58
Environment.NewLine should match the newline character in any OS. –  Jamie Kelly Apr 15 '13 at 13:59
To get the count, you can do this (string str = File.ReadAllText(@"C:\text.txt"); int count = str.Split(new string[] { Environment.NewLine }, StringSplitOptions.None).Length;) –  keyboardP Apr 15 '13 at 14:08

In Windows each new line consists of two characters \r and \n. You have 10 lines, each line have 1 visible characters and 2 new line characters which add up to 30 characters.

If you have created your file in Mac or Unix/Linux you would have gotton different result (20 characters). Because Unix uses only \n and Mac uses only \r for a new line.

You can use some editors (such as Notepad++) to show you new line characters, or even switch between different modes (DOS/Unix/Mac).

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Thank you Mr Sina –  ammarx Apr 19 '13 at 11:59

You're reading one character at a time, and each line contains three characters:

• one digit
• one carriage return (\r)
• one newline (\n)

(Windows uses \r\n as its newline sequence. The fact that you're running in a VM on a Mac doesn't affect that.)

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There's an easier way to do this. Make the entire *.txt file to a string array and measure it:

int count = 0;

string[] Text = File.ReadAllLines(/*The path the the file here*/);

for (int i = 0; i < Text.Count(); i++)
{
count += Text[i].Length;
}

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Windows typically uses \r\n for new line, that is ASCII characters 0x13 and 0x10.

Suggest you prove this to yourself by doing this:

Console.WriteLine("0x{0:x}", sr.Read());

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