1

I'm trying to import a csv file into my c++ program but I am having a few problems and would like some clarification.

The data in the csv file is arranged like below. As you can see there are 12 cells that I would like to import.

x, y, z, p
1, 2, 3, 4
5, 6, 7, 8

My function to import said csv file is the following:

  while ( getline (myfile, stringg, ','))
    {          
        std::cout << "j: " << j << "  " << stringg << std::endl;

        j++; //Note: j counts each cell.
    }
    myfile.close();
}

Everything imports perfectly fine. However it seems j has stopped counting. This shouldn't be the case since the number in the csv file is still being printed.

j: 0 x
j: 1 y
j: 2 z 
j: 3 p
1
j: 4 2
j: 5 3
j: 6 4
5
j: 7 6
j: 8 7
j: 9 8

Now I know why I believe it's doing that. The end of each line does not have a comma at the end. However! This still does not account for why j stopped counting?

4
  • @Excelcius Kindly do not edit posts to change the coding style to your personal preference. Coding style is very subjective and there is often no right or wrong.
    – Lundin
    Mar 4, 2014 at 7:27
  • What do you mean by "j stopped counting"? I see a strictly ascending sequence from j:0 to j:9 ...
    – fnokke
    Mar 4, 2014 at 7:29
  • @Lundin Ok thanks I get your point, but the indentation is unnecessary, there is just an unneeded closing bracket at the end. Anyway, my main concern was the wrong cout statement
    – Excelcius
    Mar 4, 2014 at 7:30
  • Your delimiting character in your getline call is ',', which means that stringg (when reading the last column) contains the last column, the first column, and the '\n' in between.
    – Cornstalks
    Mar 4, 2014 at 7:31

2 Answers 2

3

count of j is correct... if you take a closer look your file will be like this

x, y, z, p'\n'
1, 2, 3, 4'\n'
5, 6, 7, 8'\n'

So when you when the value of j is 3 line read by getline() is p'\n'1 which when printed on console as

j: 3 p
1

after that j is incremented and next token read in 2...same for rest..

1
  • Ah beautiful! Cheers.
    – nimbus
    Mar 4, 2014 at 7:32
0

getline is reading the input until the next ',' character. In your case, this means that stringg will contain this:

1. iteration: stringg == "x"
2. iteration: stringg == " y"
3. iteration: stringg == " z"
4. iteration: stringg == " p\n1" // The fourth string contains the next line!

Errors like these should be easily visible when debugging the program.

One approach to solve this problem could be to read line by line using the default getline and inside this loop split the resulting string into further parts using ',' as the separator.

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