Why can't I read fstream's binary data with operator>>?

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余生分开走
余生分开走 2020-12-15 06:32

If I do something like the following:

ifstream file;
file.open(\"somefile\", ios::binary);

unsigned int data;

file >> data;

My stre

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  • 2020-12-15 07:24

    It should be done as described by you. However, the C++ standard designers are not very elegant. In fact, there are a lot of flaws in the design of C++, even C++11 and C++14 has lots of defects.

    The ideal C++ design should be that:

    1.For text file:

    ifstream fin_txt("input.txt");
    int i;
    float j;
    double k;
    fin_txt >> i >> j >> k;
    

    This will read in 3 strings and parse into integer, float and double, and store them into i, j, and k respectively.

    2.For binary file:

    ifstream fin_txt("input.bin", ios::binary);
    int i;
    float j;
    double k;
    fin_txt >> i >> j >> k;
    

    This will read in 4/8 bytes (depending on whether int is 32-bit or 64-bit), 4 bytes and 8 bytes binary data and store them into i, j, and k respectively.

    Unfortunately, the current design is to report an error for Case 2. Maybe this can be achieved in C++22.

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  • 2020-12-15 07:27

    The iostream extraction operator (>>) attempts to interpret numerical strings separated by whitespace, not binary data. There are many different ways to encode an unsigned integer in binary form (e.g. a 32-bit 2's complement representation in little-endian byte order). That's why you must use the read/write functions to operate on such binary buffers.

    However, nothing prevents you from implementing your own class for serializing binary data in whatever form you wish using the insertion and extraction operators. Such a class would likely use the read function of an ifstream object internally. Alternatively, the boost serialization library may already hold exactly what you want.

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