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I'm trying to read in a file consisting of lines of text of the following sort of form...

first value 1352.2      second value     12      third value    32323
first value 1233.2      second value     22      third value    23333
first value 1233.1      second value     21      third value    64344

so I'm looking for a function analagous to fscanf or sscanf to munch each line up in one go. Is there such a function or must I pick apart each line by hand (there are several different kinds of lines).

4 Answers 4

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There's no equivalent of sscanf. I would just pick the lines apart by hand using Mid(). It's fairly easy.

  • Mid(string, start, length) will return a substring, starting at character start, and length characters long.
    • start is 1-based - the first character in the string is number 1.
    • Think carefully about the start and length. What will the file look like if it contains a really large number? Probably the number will extend further to the left (if the numbers are right-aligned in the file, which is common in my experience - your mileage may vary).
  • Use Val to convert the substrings to numbers

Personally I would avoid Input #. Input # is intended for reading files written from VB6 using Write #. If you try to read an arbitrary file format with Input #, you might encounter odd edge cases.

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    +1: esp for "Input # is intended for reading files written from VB6 using Write #" Jun 1, 2011 at 12:32
  • Ditto on the Input # caveat. Line Input # is the native way to grab a whole line of text, or use Scripting.FileSystemObject's TextStream for an altogether much more pleasant file reading experience (in my opinion).
    – dmc
    Jun 2, 2011 at 22:11
  • mid looks easy - but what in a case where you need the format string to read things. The string "2013" creates different results for "20%s" and for "%i". If the usecase is that your inputformat is given using a C like string you end up recreating scanf on your own.
    – Johannes
    Aug 8, 2013 at 16:01
  • @Johannes Sure, one can imagine cases where Mid isn't great, but Mid is perfect for the usecase in the OP's question.
    – MarkJ
    Aug 8, 2013 at 17:18
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While MarkJ has given you the VB6 way of doing things, you may want to check out FWIW:

http://www.freevbcode.com/ShowCode.asp?ID=3806

"C String Functions SScanf and StrTok Implemented in VB"

It implements a function ScanString() that's supposed to be an emulation of sscanf().

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  • Thanks to all; I've gone with this method. The function there needs a couple of tweaks to get it to work, though, if anyone else wants to try it. Jun 2, 2011 at 9:55
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Given a file like that, you can use whatever method you like to read the file line by line, then use the Trim and Split functions to create a string array of space-delimited strings for each line. Then parse the numbers from the resulting array by keeping those elements that return True from the IsNumeric function:

Put this in the immediate window to see how this would work:

s = Split(Trim("first value 1352.2      second value     12      third value    32323"))

For x = LBound(s) To UBound(s): _
   ? "'", x, s(x), IsNumeric(s(x)): _
Next x

When you press enter after Next x, you'll see this, where every number is followed by a "True":

'              0            first         False
'              1            value         False
'              2            1352.2        True
'              3                          False
'              4                          False
'              5                          False
'              6                          False
'              7                          False
'              8            second        False
'              9            value         False
'              10                         False
'              11                         False
'              12                         False
'              13                         False
'              14           12            True
'              15                         False
'              16                         False
'              17                         False
'              18                         False
'              19                         False
'              20           third         False
'              21           value         False
'              22                         False
'              23                         False
'              24                         False
'              25           32323         True

Note: I put the leading double quote on each print line so that the syntax highlighting wouldn't mess with the output.

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  • Hmm. That's an interesting idea. Jun 2, 2011 at 9:56
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The Input statement should be sufficient for most cases (maybe with some logic to detect the type of line and call the relevant input statement).

There is a fairly comprehensive examination of different file IO commands in VB6 with some nice examples of reading a 'COBOL-style' fixed with file over here.

If you are dealing with an odd or inconsistent format that Input can't deal with, as you say it is possible to pick apart by hand. This might be the best option as you mention there are different formats.

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