Partially truncating a stream (fstream or ofstream) in C++

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鱼传尺愫
鱼传尺愫 2020-12-04 02:07

I am trying to partially truncate (or shorten) an existing file, using fstream. I have tried writing an EOF character, but this seems to do nothing.

Any help would b

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  • 2020-12-04 02:42

    I don't think you can. There are many functions for moving "up and down" the wrapper hierarchy for HANDLE<->int<->FILE *, at least on Windows, but there is no "proper" to extract the FILE * from an iostreams object (if indeed it is even implemented with one).

    You may find this question to be of assistance.

    Personally I would strongly recommend steering clear of iostreams, they're poorly designed, heavily C++, and nasty to look at. Take a look at Boost's iostreams, or wrap stdio.h if you need to use classes.

    The relevant function for stdio is ftruncate().

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  • 2020-12-04 02:47

    It'll depend on the OS. Most OSes support this, but in different ways. On Windows, there's a SetEndOfFile(). On Unix and similar systems, you lseek to where you want the file to end, and do an lwrite of zero bytes there. Other OSes undoubtedly use other methods.

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  • 2020-12-04 02:57

    I bit the bullet in the end and read the part of the file to be kept to an array then re-wrote it. It's not the best solution - but as the files will always be small I have decided to accept this method.

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  • 2020-12-04 03:02

    The Boost.Interprocess library defines a portable truncate function. For some reason it is not documented, but you can find it this header file.

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