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C istream::read

Time:02-03

Why this function read files wrong? In buff after read last symbols contain garbage values. Does it related with memory alignment? I know about more safe std::string and rdbuff(), but I want to understand how work C-style strings.

char * read_from_file(const char * path)
{
    std::ifstream fin(path);
    if (fin)
    {        
        fin.seekg(0, fin.end);
        size_t length = fin.tellg();
        fin.seekg(0, fin.beg);       
        
        char * buff = new char[length];
        fin.read(buff, length);
        
        std::cout << buff << "\n";

        fin.close();
        return buff;
    }
    return nullptr;
}

For example:

File:

#version 330 core

out vec4 FragColor;

void main()
{
    FragColor = vec4(1.0f, 0.5f, 0.2f, 1.0f);
}

buff:

#version 330 core

out vec4 FragColor;

void main()
{
    FragColor = vec4(1.0f, 0.5f, 0.2f, 1.0f);
}

isample_blit_scaled  <-- garbage

CodePudding user response:

You need to add a null terminator to the string.

char * read_from_file(const char * path)
{
    std::ifstream fin(path, std::ios::binary);
    if (fin)
    {        
        fin.seekg(0, fin.end);
        size_t length = fin.tellg();
        fin.seekg(0, fin.beg);       
        
        char * buff = new char[length 1]; // allow room for terminator
        fin.read(buff, length);
        buff[length] = '\0'; // add terminator
        
        std::cout << buff << "\n";

        fin.close();
        return buff;
    }
    return nullptr;
}
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