I want to get the file names of all files that have a specific extension in a given folder (and recursively, its subfolders). That is, the file name (and extension), not the full file path. This is incredibly simple in languages like Python, but I'm not familiar with the constructs for this in C++. How can it be done?
6 Answers
#define BOOST_FILESYSTEM_VERSION 3
#define BOOST_FILESYSTEM_NO_DEPRECATED
#include <boost/filesystem.hpp>
namespace fs = boost::filesystem;
/**
* \brief Return the filenames of all files that have the specified extension
* in the specified directory and all subdirectories.
*/
std::vector<fs::path> get_all(fs::path const & root, std::string const & ext)
{
std::vector<fs::path> paths;
if (fs::exists(root) && fs::is_directory(root))
{
for (auto const & entry : fs::recursive_directory_iterator(root))
{
if (fs::is_regular_file(entry) && entry.path().extension() == ext)
paths.emplace_back(entry.path().filename());
}
}
return paths;
}
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3
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2The only thing that didn't work for me is the 'and', I replaced it by '&&'. The rest is excellent. +1– Jav_RockJul 24, 2014 at 11:57
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12Note: for the extension don't forget to add a dot...for example ".jpg" is the correct, not "jpg".– SilexJul 13, 2015 at 18:48
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1
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1Also note that this code only provides the filenames (i.e. without the full path to the file). Should you desire the full path, remove the
.filename()call. Otherwise, this code works great. Thanks!– rayryengMar 28, 2020 at 5:16
a C++17 code
#include <fstream>
#include <iostream>
#include <filesystem>
namespace fs = std::filesystem;
int main()
{
std::string path("/your/dir/");
std::string ext(".sample");
for (auto &p : fs::recursive_directory_iterator(path))
{
if (p.path().extension() == ext)
std::cout << p.path().stem().string() << '\n';
}
return 0;
}
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1I'm surprised this was below the other non-cross-platform, non-STL solutions! The only other improvements that could be made are using
std::endlor making 'p' aconstvariable. Nov 4, 2021 at 19:08 -
3@RaleighL.
std::endlis a risky pessimisation since it's in a loop. \n is more correct by default– v.oddouDec 8, 2021 at 7:57
On windows you do something like this:
void listFiles( const char* path )
{
struct _finddata_t dirFile;
long hFile;
if (( hFile = _findfirst( path, &dirFile )) != -1 )
{
do
{
if ( !strcmp( dirFile.name, "." )) continue;
if ( !strcmp( dirFile.name, ".." )) continue;
if ( gIgnoreHidden )
{
if ( dirFile.attrib & _A_HIDDEN ) continue;
if ( dirFile.name[0] == '.' ) continue;
}
// dirFile.name is the name of the file. Do whatever string comparison
// you want here. Something like:
if ( strstr( dirFile.name, ".txt" ))
printf( "found a .txt file: %s", dirFile.name );
} while ( _findnext( hFile, &dirFile ) == 0 );
_findclose( hFile );
}
}
On Posix, like Linux or OsX:
void listFiles( const char* path )
{
DIR* dirFile = opendir( path );
if ( dirFile )
{
struct dirent* hFile;
errno = 0;
while (( hFile = readdir( dirFile )) != NULL )
{
if ( !strcmp( hFile->d_name, "." )) continue;
if ( !strcmp( hFile->d_name, ".." )) continue;
// in linux hidden files all start with '.'
if ( gIgnoreHidden && ( hFile->d_name[0] == '.' )) continue;
// dirFile.name is the name of the file. Do whatever string comparison
// you want here. Something like:
if ( strstr( hFile->d_name, ".txt" ))
printf( "found an .txt file: %s", hFile->d_name );
}
closedir( dirFile );
}
}
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Your solutions would find the file in the pattern, "foo.txt.exe". I wouldn't consider that to have a .txt extension. Sep 17, 2015 at 6:48
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On windows, where are you setting the value of "gIgnoreHidden". Is it a flag? Apr 16, 2017 at 15:17
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yes - its a global boolean in the example. But really you can do anything here - like pass it in as another argument to listFiles. Apr 17, 2017 at 13:48
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On x64 builds from Windows 8 (?) onwards, I believe the hFile should be an intptr_t rather than a long. Using long will result in badness when _findnext is called.– KaitainMay 2, 2017 at 21:41
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Get list of files and process each file and loop through them and store back in different folder
void getFilesList(string filePath,string extension, vector<string> & returnFileName)
{
WIN32_FIND_DATA fileInfo;
HANDLE hFind;
string fullPath = filePath + extension;
hFind = FindFirstFile(fullPath.c_str(), &fileInfo);
if (hFind != INVALID_HANDLE_VALUE){
returnFileName.push_back(filePath+fileInfo.cFileName);
while (FindNextFile(hFind, &fileInfo) != 0){
returnFileName.push_back(filePath+fileInfo.cFileName);
}
}
}
USE: you can use like this load all the files from folder and loop through one by one
String optfileName ="";
String inputFolderPath ="";
String extension = "*.jpg*";
getFilesList(inputFolderPath,extension,filesPaths);
vector<string>::const_iterator it = filesPaths.begin();
while( it != filesPaths.end())
{
frame = imread(*it);//read file names
//doyourwork here ( frame );
sprintf(buf, "%s/Out/%d.jpg", optfileName.c_str(),it->c_str());
imwrite(buf,frame);
it++;
}
You don't say what OS you are on, but there are several options.
As commenters have mentioned, boost::filesystem will work if you can use boost.
Other options are
Here's my solution (works on *nix systems):
#include <dirent.h>
bool FindAllFiles(std::string path, std::string type, std::vector<std::string> &FileList){
DIR *dir;
struct dirent *ent;
FileList.clear();
if ((dir = opendir (path.c_str())) != NULL) {
//Examine all files in this directory
while ((ent = readdir (dir)) != NULL) {
std::string filename = std::string(ent->d_name);
if(filename.length() > 4){
std::string ext = filename.substr(filename.size() - 3);
if(ext == type){
//store this file if it's correct type
FileList.push_back(filename);
}
}
}
closedir (dir);
} else {
//Couldn't open dir
std::cerr << "Could not open directory: " << path << "\n";
return false;
}
return true;
}
Obviously change the desired extension to whatever you like. Also assumes a 3 character type.
boost::filesystemis good with files.boost::filesystem.