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There are two very common special cases of input and output: using files, and using strings in memory.
libio
defines four specialized classes for these cases:
ifstream
ofstream
istrstream
ostrstream
These methods are declared in `fstream.h'.
You can read data from class ifstream
with any operation from class
istream
. There are also a few specialized facilities:
ifstream
associated with a new file for input. (If you
use this version of the constructor, you need to call
ifstream::open
before actually reading anything)
ifstream
for reading from a file that was already open,
using file descriptor fd. (This constructor is compatible with
other versions of iostreams for POSIX systems, but is not part of
the ANSI working paper.)
*fname
for this ifstream
object.
By default, the file is opened for input (with ios::in
as
mode). If you use this constructor, the file will be closed when
the ifstream
is destroyed.
You can use the optional argument mode to specify how to open the
file, by combining these enumerated values (with `|' bitwise or).
(These values are actually defined in class ios
, so that all
file-related streams may inherit them.) Only some of these modes are
defined in the latest draft ANSI specification; if portability is
important, you may wish to avoid the others.
ios::in
ios::out
ios::ate
ios::app
ios::trunc
ios::nocreate
ios::noreplace
ios::bin
The last optional argument prot is specific to Unix-like systems; it specifies the file protection (by default `644').
ifstream
object
already exists (for instance, after using the default constructor). The
arguments, options and defaults all have the same meanings as in the
fully specified ifstream
constructor.
You can write data to class ofstream
with any operation from class
ostream
. There are also a few specialized facilities:
ofstream
associated with a new file for output.
ofstream
for writing to a file that was already open,
using file descriptor fd.
*fname
for this ofstream
object.
By default, the file is opened for output (with ios::out
as mode).
You can use the optional argument mode to specify how to open the
file, just as described for ifstream::ifstream
.
The last optional argument prot specifies the file protection (by default `644').
ofstream
objects are closed when the
corresponding object is destroyed.
ofstream
object
already exists (for instance, after using the default constructor). The
arguments, options and defaults all have the same meanings as in the
fully specified ofstream
constructor.
The class fstream
combines the facilities of ifstream
and
ofstream
, just as iostream
combines istream
and
ostream
.
The class fstreambase
underlies both ifstream
and
ofstream
. They both inherit this additional method:
ios::fail
in
this object to mark the event.
The classes istrstream
, ostrstream
, and strstream
provide some additional features for reading and writing strings in
memory--both static strings, and dynamically allocated strings. The
underlying class strstreambase
provides some features common to
all three; strstreambuf
underlies that in turn.
istrstream
with an existing
static string starting at str, of size size. If you do not
specify size, the string is treated as a NUL
terminated string.
ifstream::ifstream
; if you do not specify
one, the new stream is simply open for output, with mode ios::out
.
ostrstream
.
ostrstream
. Implies
`ostrstream::freeze()'.
Note that if you want the string to be nul-terminated, you must do that yourself (perhaps by writing ends to the stream).
ostrstream
is not to change dynamically; while frozen,
it will not be reallocated if it needs more space, and it will not be
deallocated when the ostrstream
is destroyed. Use
`freeze(1)' if you refer to the string as a pointer after creating
it via ostrstream
facilities.
`freeze(0)' cancels this declaration, allowing a dynamically
allocated string to be freed when its ostrstream
is destroyed.
If this ostrstream
is already static--that is, if it was created
to manage an existing statically allocated string---freeze
is
unnecessary, and has no effect.
freeze(1)
is in effect for this string.
strstreambuf
.
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