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June 04, 2010 File.byLine ought to return dups? | ||||
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Hi folks, I expected the following program to print the lines of a file in reverse: // bad.d import std.stdio; import std.range; void main() { auto f = File("bad.d"); foreach(char[] line; retro(array(f.byLine()))) writeln(line); } However, this produces very unusual output: fragments of the same lines are printed repeatedly. I suspect it's because the byLine() 'generator' is not dup'ing the arrays it reads from the file. This works as expected: // good.d import std.stdio; import std.range; Retro!(char[][]) retroLines(File f) { char[][] lines; foreach(line; f.byLine()) lines ~= line.dup; // note the .dup return retro(lines); } void main() { auto f = File("good.d"); foreach(line; retroLines(f)) writeln(line); } If you remove the '.dup', then this behaves badly as well. So is this a bug in File.byLine, or am I just using it badly? :) Thanks, Graham |
June 04, 2010 Re: File.byLine ought to return dups? | ||||
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Posted in reply to Graham Fawcett | On Fri, 04 Jun 2010 15:27:03 -0400, Graham Fawcett <fawcett@uwindsor.ca> wrote: > Hi folks, > > I expected the following program to print the lines of a file in > reverse: > > // bad.d > import std.stdio; > import std.range; > void main() { > auto f = File("bad.d"); > foreach(char[] line; retro(array(f.byLine()))) > writeln(line); > } > > However, this produces very unusual output: fragments of the same > lines are printed repeatedly. I suspect it's because the byLine() > 'generator' is not dup'ing the arrays it reads from the file. > > This works as expected: > > // good.d > import std.stdio; > import std.range; > Retro!(char[][]) retroLines(File f) { > char[][] lines; > foreach(line; f.byLine()) > lines ~= line.dup; // note the .dup > return retro(lines); > } > void main() { > auto f = File("good.d"); > foreach(line; retroLines(f)) > writeln(line); > } > > If you remove the '.dup', then this behaves badly as well. > > So is this a bug in File.byLine, or am I just using it badly? :) The latter. File is re-using the buffer for each line, so you are seeing the data get overwritten. This is for performance reasons. Not everyone wants incur heap allocations for every line of a file ;) As you showed, it's possible to get the desired behavior if you need it. The reverse would be impossible. Now, that being said, a nice addition would be to create a duper range that allows you to do one expression: foreach(char[] line; retro(array(duper(f.byLine())))) -Steve |
June 04, 2010 Re: File.byLine ought to return dups? | ||||
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Posted in reply to Graham Fawcett | Looking at the code, it appears to be by design, though not explictly documented - it probably should be. Something to note is if you specifically ask for a string in the foreach, it will refuse to compile - the compiler knows it is a mutable char[] too. |
June 04, 2010 Re: File.byLine ought to return dups? | ||||
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Posted in reply to Steven Schveighoffer | Sorry for the double-post to .announce -- I had deleted my .announce post, but obviously not thoroughly enough. I'll follow up on the list.
Graham
On Fri, 04 Jun 2010 15:41:43 -0400, Steven Schveighoffer wrote:
> On Fri, 04 Jun 2010 15:27:03 -0400, Graham Fawcett <fawcett@uwindsor.ca> wrote:
>
>> Hi folks,
>>
>> I expected the following program to print the lines of a file in reverse:
>>
>> // bad.d
>> import std.stdio;
>> import std.range;
>> void main() {
>> auto f = File("bad.d");
>> foreach(char[] line; retro(array(f.byLine())))
>> writeln(line);
>> }
>>
>> However, this produces very unusual output: fragments of the same lines are printed repeatedly. I suspect it's because the byLine() 'generator' is not dup'ing the arrays it reads from the file.
>>
>> This works as expected:
>>
>> // good.d
>> import std.stdio;
>> import std.range;
>> Retro!(char[][]) retroLines(File f) {
>> char[][] lines;
>> foreach(line; f.byLine())
>> lines ~= line.dup; // note the .dup
>> return retro(lines);
>> }
>> void main() {
>> auto f = File("good.d");
>> foreach(line; retroLines(f))
>> writeln(line);
>> }
>>
>> If you remove the '.dup', then this behaves badly as well.
>>
>> So is this a bug in File.byLine, or am I just using it badly? :)
>
> The latter. File is re-using the buffer for each line, so you are seeing the data get overwritten. This is for performance reasons. Not everyone wants incur heap allocations for every line of a file ;) As you showed, it's possible to get the desired behavior if you need it. The reverse would be impossible.
>
> Now, that being said, a nice addition would be to create a duper range that allows you to do one expression:
>
> foreach(char[] line; retro(array(duper(f.byLine()))))
>
> -Steve
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