Reading binary istream byte by byte

你。 提交于 2019-11-30 16:26:16

问题


I was attempting to read a binary file byte by byte using an ifstream. I've used istream methods like get() before to read entire chunks of a binary file at once without a problem. But my current task lends itself to going byte by byte and relying on the buffering in the io-system to make it efficient. The problem is that I seemed to reach the end of the file several bytes sooner than I should. So I wrote the following test program:

#include <iostream>
#include <fstream>

int main() {
    typedef unsigned char uint8;
    std::ifstream source("test.dat", std::ios_base::binary);
    while (source) {
        std::ios::pos_type before = source.tellg();
        uint8 x;
        source >> x;
        std::ios::pos_type after = source.tellg();
        std::cout << before << ' ' << static_cast<int>(x) << ' '
                  << after << std::endl;
    }
    return 0;
}

This dumps the contents of test.dat, one byte per line, showing the file position before and after.

Sure enough, if my file happens to have the two-byte sequence 0x0D-0x0A (which corresponds to carriage return and line feed), those bytes are skipped.

  • I've opened the stream in binary mode. Shouldn't that prevent it from interpreting line separators?
  • Do extraction operators always use text mode?
  • What's the right way to read byte by byte from a binary istream?

MSVC++ 2008 on Windows.


回答1:


The >> extractors are for formatted input; they skip white space (by default). For single character unformatted input, you can use istream::get() (returns an int, either EOF if the read fails, or a value in the range [0,UCHAR_MAX]) or istream::get(char&) (puts the character read in the argument, returns something which converts to bool, true if the read succeeds, and false if it fails.




回答2:


there is a read() member function in which you can specify the number of bytes.




回答3:


Why are you using formatted extraction, rather than .read()?




回答4:


source.get()

will give you a single byte. It is unformatted input function. operator>> is formatted input function that may imply skipping whitespace characters.




回答5:


As others mentioned, you should use istream::read(). But, if you must use formatted extraction, consider std::noskipws.



来源:https://stackoverflow.com/questions/5513532/reading-binary-istream-byte-by-byte

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