Difference between revisions of "Intermediate C++ Game Programming Tutorial 4"

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== Homework ==
 
== Homework ==
Write a console application where the user can enter data pairs consisting of name:value in the form of c-string:unsigned int. Store they entries in memory, and allow the user to print out a text chart on demand. Also allow the user to save the entries to a file and load a file of entries into memory. You may not use any library functions beyond what is already being used in the Intermediate series.
+
Write a console application where the user can enter a fixed number of data pairs consisting of name:value in the form of c-string:unsigned int. Store the entries in memory, and allow the user to print out a text chart of the entry data on demand. Also allow the user to save the entries to a file and load a file of entries into memory. You may not use any library functions beyond what is already being used in the Intermediate series.
  
 
== See also ==
 
== See also ==
 
* [[Intermediate C++ Game Programming Tutorial 5|Next in series (Tutorial 5)]]
 
* [[Intermediate C++ Game Programming Tutorial 5|Next in series (Tutorial 5)]]
 
* [[Intermediate C++ Game Programming Series]]
 
* [[Intermediate C++ Game Programming Series]]

Revision as of 23:23, 5 June 2017

In this tutorial we tackle the idea file IO using basic input output functions. We also learn about the basic concept of a stream, learn the difference between binary mode and text mode, and Chili even sneaks in a dank Cypress Hill reference.

Topics Covered

  • Opening a file with std::ifstream
  • Reading with get() and monitoring the steam state with good()
  • Detecting the EOF (End of File) as well as errors in reading and file opening
  • Writing to files with std::ofstream
  • The working directory of the application (where it looks for files)
  • The difference between binary mode and text mode
  • Writing and reading blocks of bytes with write() and read()

Video Timestamp Index

Tutorial 4

Source Code

GitHub Repo

Homework

Write a console application where the user can enter a fixed number of data pairs consisting of name:value in the form of c-string:unsigned int. Store the entries in memory, and allow the user to print out a text chart of the entry data on demand. Also allow the user to save the entries to a file and load a file of entries into memory. You may not use any library functions beyond what is already being used in the Intermediate series.

See also