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Getline to String Copies newline as well

I am reading a file line by line and adding each line to a string. However the string length increases by 1 for every line which I believe is due to newline character. How can I remove it from being copied.

Here is my code attempt to do the same.

if (inputFile.is_open())
{
    {
        string currentLine;
        while (!inputFile.eof())
            while( getline( inputFile, currentLine ) )
            {
                string s1=currentLine;
                cout<<s1.length();
            }

[Updated Description] i have used notepad++ to determine the length of what i am selecting line by line. So they are showing some 123, 450, 500, 120 for which my program shows 124,451,501,120. Except for the last line, all line.length() shows an increased by 1 value.

like image 732
typedef1 Avatar asked Jan 23 '26 21:01

typedef1


1 Answers

It looks like inputFile has Windows-style line-breaks (CRLF) but your program is splitting the input on Unix-like line-breaks (LF), because std::getline(), breaks on \n by default, leaving the CR (\r) at the end of your string.

You'll need to trim the extraneous \rs. Here is one way to do it, along with a small test:

#include <iostream>
#include <sstream>
#include <iomanip>

void remove_carriage_return(std::string& line)
{
    if (*line.rbegin() == '\r')
    {
        line.erase(line.length() - 1);
    }
}

void find_line_lengths(std::istream& inputFile, std::ostream& output)
{
    std::string currentLine;
    while (std::getline(inputFile, currentLine))
    {
        remove_carriage_return(currentLine);
        output
            << "The current line is "
            << currentLine.length()
            << " characters long and ends with '0x"
            << std::setw(2) << std::setfill('0') << std::hex
            << static_cast<int>(*currentLine.rbegin())
            << "'"
            << std::endl;
    }
}

int main()
{
    std::istringstream test_data(
        "\n"
        "1\n"
        "12\n"
        "123\n"
        "\r\n"
        "1\r\n"
        "12\r\n"
        "123\r\n"
        );

    find_line_lengths(test_data, std::cout);
}

Output:

The current line is 0 characters long and ends with '0x00'
The current line is 1 characters long and ends with '0x31'
The current line is 2 characters long and ends with '0x32'
The current line is 3 characters long and ends with '0x33'
The current line is 0 characters long and ends with '0x00'
The current line is 1 characters long and ends with '0x31'
The current line is 2 characters long and ends with '0x32'
The current line is 3 characters long and ends with '0x33'

Things to note:

  • You don't need to test for EOF. std::getline() will return the stream, which will cast to false when it can read no more from inputFile.
  • You don't need to copy a string to determine its length.
like image 133
Johnsyweb Avatar answered Jan 26 '26 12:01

Johnsyweb