I'm using C# and am trying to output a few lines to an ASCII file. The issue I'm having is that my Linux host is seeing these files as:
ASCII text, with CRLF line terminators
I need this file to be just:
ASCII text
The CRLF is causing some issues and I was hoping there was a way in C# to just create the file formatted in the way I want.
I'm basically using this code:
string[] lines = { "Line1", "Line2" };
File.WriteAllLines(myOutputFile, lines, System.Text.Encoding.UTF8);
Is there an easy way to create the file without the CRLF line terminators? I can probably take care of it on the Linux side, but would rather just create the file in the proper format from the beginning.
@JonSkeet's answer is a quick and simple solution. It's downside is that it allocates a single string containing all lines of text prior to writing to the file. For large amounts of text, this can put pressure on the memory management system.
An alternative that allows streaming lines without extra allocation is:
Assuming you still actually want the linebreaks, you just want line feeds instead of carriage return / line feed, you could use:
or if you definitely want a line break after the last line too:
(Alternatively, as you say, you could fix it on the Linux side, e.g. with
dos2unix
.)