I know this is a noob question, but I've worked with Python before and when you wanted to simply access a .txt file for example, all you had to do was make sure the txt file was in the same directory. I have the following C++ code below but it's not finding the Numbers.txt file that I have saved on my desktop. All I have in the file is one line of numbers of type double. All I want to do is to find the average of all of the numbers in the file. The program runs fine, but it doesn't print the output correctly. After checking to see what is printing into output by just printing output[0], I've discovered that the file is not copying it's contents into the array. Could someone clear this little problem up for me or at least point me in the right direction to a good tutorial?
int main() {
cout << "Getting File Information..." << endl;
ifstream file;
char output[100];
//int x;
file.open("Numbers.txt", ios::in); // open file
cout << "Opened File Successfully ****************" << endl;
file >> output; // empty file contents into output
cout << output; // print out contents of file
cout << "Should have printed out results by now" << endl;
//file >> x;
file.close();
return 0;
}
I just had this same problem, and I didn't find any of those answers to work. Then I remembered what I learned a long time ago in OOP. What you have to do is take that text file on your desktop, and find the project folder in your visual studio projects within your computers documents, and put the text file in that folder outside of visual studio. Then in visual studio under source files, right click-> add existing item->(your text file)
:)
btw I bumped this thread because this thread said it was a good idea, and I wanted it updated for the sake of people googling the same question. https://meta.stackexchange.com/questions/125965/is-bumping-old-questions-allowed
Working path is project directory.
Visual Studio sets the working directory to YourProjectDirectory\Debug\Bin when running in debug mode. If your text file is in YourProjectDirectory, you need to account for that difference.
The easiest way to do that is to include your text files in the project and set their build action (in the Properties window) to Content.
If you're talking about running the code within the Visual Studio debugger via F5 or Debug / Start Debugging, you can set the working directory of your program via Project / <Project name> Properties / Configuration / Debugging / Working directory.
Put your text file in a directory somewhere, and set Working directory to point to that directory.