3

I want to save a multidimensional array to a file. A struct for example:

struct StructSub {
    unsigned short id;
};
struct MyStruct {
    struct StructSub sub[3];
};

// Use the struct
struct MyStruct main;
int i = 0;
while (i < 3) {
    main.sub[i].id = i;
    i++;
}

For this example I want to save the data to a file in this format (normal text):

MyStruct main {
    StructSub sub[0] {
        id = 0;
    }
    StructSub sub[1] {
        id = 1;
    }
    StructSub sub[2] {
        id = 2;
    }
}

What's the easiest way to do this?

0

6 Answers 6

6

Do remember that saving raw structs to a file like this is not portable at all. The compiler might add padding to the struct (changing sizeof(your_struct)), endianness might be different, etc. If this is however, of no concern, then fwrite() works fine.

Remember that if your struct contains any pointers, you want to write the data that the pointer points to, not the value of the pointer itself.

3

Try this

struct StructSub {
    unsigned short id;
};
struct MyStruct {
    struct StructSub sub[10];
};

// Use the struct
struct MyStruct main;
int i = 0;
while (i < 10) {
    main.sub[i].id = i;
}

Write to file

FILE* output;
output = fopen("Data.dat", "wb");
fwrite(&main, sizeof(main), 1, output);
fclose(output);

Read file

struct Data data;
FILE* input;
input = fopen("Data.dat", "rb");
fread(&main, sizeof(main), 1, input);
// you got the data from the file!
fclose(input);

these link support what above code is all about - http://c-faq.com/struct/io.html

fwrite(&somestruct, sizeof somestruct, 1, fp);
5
  • 4
    Are you seriously suggesting a structure instance called main in a C program?! Sep 26, 2010 at 11:08
  • 2
    This definitely won't output in the file format that the question asks for.
    – CB Bailey
    Sep 26, 2010 at 11:22
  • Thanks, but that doesn't save the data like in my output example as Charles said.
    – Midas
    Sep 26, 2010 at 13:10
  • this code is to illustrate the idea of saving file and retrieving it, you can adjust code as per requirement. Sep 26, 2010 at 13:13
  • I want to save the struct to a normal text file. I don't know how to adjust this code, that's my question.
    – Midas
    Sep 26, 2010 at 13:21
2

I'm guessing something like this is more what you want. It's not as terse as it could be, but it's very straightforward and can be easily extended to accomodate other structures.

void WriteIndent(FILE* file, int indent) {
    int i = 0;
    while (i < indent) {
        fprintf(file, "\t");
        ++i;
    }
}


void WriteStructSub(FILE* file, StructSub* s, char* id, int indent) {

    WriteIndent(file, indent);
    fprintf(file, "StructSub %s {\n", id);

    WriteIndent(file, indent + 1);
    fprintf(file, "id = %i;\n", s->id);

    WriteIndent(file, indent);
    fprintf(file, "}\n");

}


void WriteMyStruct(FILE* file, MyStruct* s, char* id, int indent) {

    WriteIndent(file, indent);
    fprintf(file, "MyStruct %s {\n", id);
    int i = 0;

    while (i < 3) {

        char name[7];
        sprintf(name, "sub[%i]", i);

        WriteStructSub(file, &s->sub[i], name, indent + 1);
        ++i;

    }

    WriteIndent(file, indent);
    fprintf(file, "}\n");

}


int main(int argc, char** argv) {

    MyStruct s;
    int i = 0;
    while (i < 3) {
        s.sub[i].id = i;
        ++i;
    }

    FILE* output = fopen("data.out", "w");
    WriteMyStruct(output, &s, "main", 0);
    fclose(output);

}
0
2

You can use Serialization libraries available that does this.

If you can use C++, there is Boost::Serialization library just for that. You may also like to checkout:

  1. s11n library.
  2. This answer.
  3. Tpl library.
1
  • I don't want to use library's.
    – Midas
    Sep 26, 2010 at 13:23
1

you can use basic fileio, just make sure you write in binary.

FILE * pFile;
pFile = fopen( "structs.bin","wb" );
if ( pFile!=NULL ) {
  frwite( main, 1, sizeof(struct MyStruct), pFile );
  fclose (pFile);
}

If you do it this way though, it's not the most platform portable as there is endianness to consider.

0
1

Aside from the name of the object being main, which may cause you any number of strange problems: just brute-force it -- there is no better way :)

/* pseudo code */
write struct header
foreach element
    write element header
    write element value(s)
    write element footer
endfor
write struct footer

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