author | llornkcor <llornkcor> | 2003-07-10 02:40:10 (UTC) |
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committer | llornkcor <llornkcor> | 2003-07-10 02:40:10 (UTC) |
commit | 155d68c1e7d7dc0fed2534ac43d6d77ce2781f55 (patch) (side-by-side diff) | |
tree | e6edaa5a7040fe6c224c3943d1094dcf02e4f74c /qmake/tools/qfile.cpp | |
parent | 86703e8a5527ef114facd02c005b6b3a7e62e263 (diff) | |
download | opie-155d68c1e7d7dc0fed2534ac43d6d77ce2781f55.zip opie-155d68c1e7d7dc0fed2534ac43d6d77ce2781f55.tar.gz opie-155d68c1e7d7dc0fed2534ac43d6d77ce2781f55.tar.bz2 |
update qmake to 1.05a
-rw-r--r-- | qmake/tools/qfile.cpp | 3 |
1 files changed, 2 insertions, 1 deletions
diff --git a/qmake/tools/qfile.cpp b/qmake/tools/qfile.cpp index a578b49..c088b55 100644 --- a/qmake/tools/qfile.cpp +++ b/qmake/tools/qfile.cpp @@ -43,97 +43,97 @@ #endif // POSIX Large File Support redefines truncate -> truncate64 #if defined(truncate) # undef truncate #endif #include "qfile.h" extern bool qt_file_access( const QString& fn, int t ); /*! \class QFile qfile.h \reentrant \brief The QFile class is an I/O device that operates on files. \ingroup io \mainclass QFile is an I/O device for reading and writing binary and text files. A QFile may be used by itself or more conveniently with a QDataStream or QTextStream. The file name is usually passed in the constructor but can be changed with setName(). You can check for a file's existence with exists() and remove a file with remove(). The file is opened with open(), closed with close() and flushed with flush(). Data is usually read and written using QDataStream or QTextStream, but you can read with readBlock() and readLine() and write with writeBlock(). QFile also supports getch(), ungetch() and putch(). The size of the file is returned by size(). You can get the current file position or move to a new file position using the at() functions. If you've reached the end of the file, atEnd() returns TRUE. The file handle is returned by handle(). Here is a code fragment that uses QTextStream to read a text file line by line. It prints each line with a line number. \code QStringList lines; QFile file( "file.txt" ); if ( file.open( IO_ReadOnly ) ) { QTextStream stream( &file ); QString line; int i = 1; - while ( !stream.eof() ) { + while ( !stream.atEnd() ) { line = stream.readLine(); // line of text excluding '\n' printf( "%3d: %s\n", i++, line.latin1() ); lines += line; } file.close(); } \endcode Writing text is just as easy. The following example shows how to write the data we read into the string list from the previous example: \code QFile file( "file.txt" ); if ( file.open( IO_WriteOnly ) ) { QTextStream stream( &file ); for ( QStringList::Iterator it = lines.begin(); it != lines.end(); ++it ) stream << *it << "\n"; file.close(); } \endcode The QFileInfo class holds detailed information about a file, such as access permissions, file dates and file types. The QDir class manages directories and lists of file names. Qt uses Unicode file names. If you want to do your own I/O on Unix systems you may want to use encodeName() (and decodeName()) to convert the file name into the local encoding. \important readAll() \sa QDataStream, QTextStream */ /*! \fn Q_LONG QFile::writeBlock( const QByteArray& data ) \overload */ /*! Constructs a QFile with no name. */ QFile::QFile() { @@ -245,96 +245,97 @@ bool QFile::exists() const bool QFile::exists( const QString &fileName ) { return qt_file_access( fileName, F_OK ); } /*! Removes the file specified by the file name currently set. Returns TRUE if successful; otherwise returns FALSE. The file is closed before it is removed. */ bool QFile::remove() { close(); return remove( fn ); } #if defined(Q_OS_MAC) || defined(Q_OS_MSDOS) || defined(Q_OS_WIN32) || defined(Q_OS_OS2) # define HAS_TEXT_FILEMODE // has translate/text filemode #endif #if defined(O_NONBLOCK) # define HAS_ASYNC_FILEMODE # define OPEN_ASYNC O_NONBLOCK #elif defined(O_NDELAY) # define HAS_ASYNC_FILEMODE # define OPEN_ASYNC O_NDELAY #endif /*! Flushes the file buffer to the disk. close() also flushes the file buffer. */ void QFile::flush() { if ( isOpen() && fh ) // can only flush open/buffered fflush( fh ); // file } /*! \reimp \fn QIODevice::Offset QFile::at() const */ /*! Returns TRUE if the end of file has been reached; otherwise returns FALSE. + If QFile has not been open()'d, then the behavior is undefined. \sa size() */ bool QFile::atEnd() const { if ( !isOpen() ) { #if defined(QT_CHECK_STATE) qWarning( "QFile::atEnd: File is not open" ); #endif return FALSE; } if ( isDirectAccess() && !isTranslated() ) { if ( at() < length ) return FALSE; } return QIODevice::atEnd(); } /*! Reads a line of text. Reads bytes from the file into the char* \a p, until end-of-line or \a maxlen bytes have been read, whichever occurs first. Returns the number of bytes read, or -1 if there was an error. Any terminating newline is not stripped. This function is only efficient for buffered files. Avoid readLine() for files that have been opened with the \c IO_Raw flag. \sa readBlock(), QTextStream::readLine() */ Q_LONG QFile::readLine( char *p, Q_ULONG maxlen ) { if ( maxlen == 0 ) // application bug? return 0; #if defined(QT_CHECK_STATE) Q_CHECK_PTR( p ); if ( !isOpen() ) { // file not open qWarning( "QFile::readLine: File not open" ); return -1; } if ( !isReadable() ) { // reading not permitted qWarning( "QFile::readLine: Read operation not permitted" ); return -1; } |