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Struct std.stdio.File
Encapsulates a FILE*
. Generally D does not attempt to provide
thin wrappers over equivalent functions in the C standard library, but
manipulating FILE*
values directly is unsafe and error-prone in
many ways. The File
type ensures safe manipulation, automatic
file closing, and a lot of convenience.
struct File
;
The underlying FILE*
handle is maintained in a reference-counted
manner, such that as soon as the last File
variable bound to a
given FILE*
goes out of scope, the underlying FILE*
is
automatically closed.
Constructors
Name | Description |
---|---|
this
|
Constructor taking the name of the file to open and the open mode. |
Properties
Name | Type | Description |
---|---|---|
eof [get]
|
bool | Returns true if the file is at end (see feof).
|
error [get]
|
bool | If the file is not opened, returns true . Otherwise, returns
ferror for
the file handle.
|
fileno [get]
|
int | Returns the file number corresponding to this object. |
isOpen [get]
|
bool | Returns true if the file is opened.
|
name [get]
|
string | Returns the name last used to initialize this File , if any.
|
size [get]
|
ulong | Get the size of the file, ulong.max if file is not searchable, but still throws if an actual error occurs. |
tell [get]
|
ulong | Calls ftell for the managed file handle. |
windowsHandle [get]
|
int | Returns the underlying operating system HANDLE (Windows only).
|
Methods
Name | Description |
---|---|
byChunk
|
Returns an input range set up to read from the file handle a chunk at a time. |
byLine
|
Returns an input range set up to read from the file handle one line at a time. |
byLineCopy
|
Returns an input range
set up to read from the file handle one line
at a time. Each line will be newly allocated. front will cache
its value to allow repeated calls without unnecessary allocations.
|
byRecord
|
Creates an input range set up to parse one line at a time from the file into a tuple. |
clearerr
|
If the file is not opened, succeeds vacuously. Otherwise, returns clearerr for the file handle. |
close
|
If the file was unopened, succeeds vacuously. Otherwise closes the
file (by calling fclose),
throwing on error. Even if an exception is thrown, afterwards the File object is empty. This is different from detach in that it
always closes the file; consequently, all other File objects
referring to the same handle will see a closed file henceforth.
|
detach
|
Detaches from the underlying file. If the sole owner, calls close .
|
fdopen
|
First calls detach (throwing on failure), then attempts to
associate the given file descriptor with the File , and sets the file's name to null .
|
flush
|
Flushes the C FILE buffers.
|
getFP
|
Returns the FILE* corresponding to this object.
|
lock
|
Locks the specified file segment. If the file segment is already locked
by another process, waits until the existing lock is released.
If both start and length are zero, the entire file is locked.
|
lockingBinaryWriter
|
Returns an output range that locks the file and allows fast writing to it. |
lockingTextWriter
|
Output range which locks the file when created, and unlocks the file when it goes out of scope. |
opAssign
|
Assigns a file to another. The target of the assignment gets detached from whatever file it was attached to, and attaches itself to the new file. |
open
|
Detaches from the current file (throwing on failure), and then attempts to
open file name with mode stdioOpenmode . The mode has the
same semantics as in the C standard library fopen function.
|
popen
|
Detaches from the current file (throwing on failure), and then runs a command by calling the C standard library function popen. |
rawRead
|
Calls fread for the file handle. The number of items to read and the size of each item is inferred from the size and type of the input array, respectively. |
rawWrite
|
Calls fwrite for the file handle. The number of items to write and the size of each item is inferred from the size and type of the input array, respectively. An error is thrown if the buffer could not be written in its entirety. |
readf
|
Reads formatted data from the file using formattedRead .
|
readln
|
Read line from the file handle and return it as a specified type. |
readln
|
Read line from the file handle and write it to buf[] , including
terminating character.
|
reopen
|
Reuses the File object to either open a different file, or change
the file mode. If name is null , the mode of the currently open
file is changed; otherwise, a new file is opened, reusing the C
FILE* . The function has the same semantics as in the C standard
library freopen
function.
|
rewind
|
Calls rewind for the file handle. |
seek
|
Calls fseek for the file handle to move its position indicator. |
setvbuf
|
Calls setvbuf for the file handle. |
setvbuf
|
Calls setvbuf for the file handle. |
sync
|
Forces any data buffered by the OS to be written to disk.
Call flush before calling this function to flush the C FILE buffers first.
|
tmpfile
|
Returns a temporary file by calling
tmpfile.
Note that the created file has no name .
|
tryLock
|
Attempts to lock the specified file segment.
If both start and length are zero, the entire file is locked.
|
unlock
|
Removes the lock over the specified file segment. |
windowsHandleOpen
|
First calls detach (throwing on failure), and then attempts to
associate the given Windows HANDLE with the File . The mode must
be compatible with the access attributes of the handle. Windows only.
|
wrapFile
|
Unsafe function that wraps an existing FILE* . The resulting File never takes the initiative in closing the file.
Note that the created file has no name
|
write
|
Writes its arguments in text format to the file. |
writef
|
Writes its arguments in text format to the file, according to the format string fmt. |
writefln
|
Equivalent to file .
|
writeln
|
Writes its arguments in text format to the file, followed by a newline. |
Example
// test.d
void main(string[] args)
{
auto f = File("test.txt", "w"); // open for writing
f .write("Hello");
if (args .length > 1)
{
auto g = f; // now g and f write to the same file
// internal reference count is 2
g .write(", ", args[1]);
// g exits scope, reference count decreases to 1
}
f .writeln("!");
// f exits scope, reference count falls to zero,
// underlying `FILE*` is closed.
}
% rdmd test.d Jimmy % cat test.txt Hello, Jimmy! % _
Authors
Walter Bright, Andrei Alexandrescu, Alex Rønne Petersen
License
Copyright © 1999-2022 by the D Language Foundation | Page generated by ddox.