Using an array to search a file VB - vb.net

I have a program that needs to look through a text file line by line, the lines look like this:
10-19-2015 Brett Reinhard All Bike Yoga Run the Studio Design Your Own Strength
These are separated by tabs in the text file.
What I want to do is look at the second value, in this case "Brett Reinhard" and move the full line to another textfile called "Brett Reinhard"
I was thinking of using an array to check to see if the second 'column' in the line matched any value within a given array, if it does I want to perform a specific action.
The way I am thinking of doing this is with a For/next statement, now while it will work it will be a laborious process for the computer that I will be using it on.
The code I am thinking of using looks like this:
For intCounter=0 to Whatever Number is the last number of the array
If currentfield.contains(array(intCounter)) Then
Open StreamWriter(File directory & array(intcounter) & ".txt")
Streamwriter.Writeline(currentfield)
End IF
Is there a better way of doing this, such as referencing the second 'column' in the line, similar to the syntax used in VBA for excel.
Name=Cells(1,2).Value

If you can guarantee that a line will only use the tab characters as field separators, you can do something along this:
Open the stream for reading text
Open a stream for writing text
Read a line of text
Use the Split method to break the incoming line into an array of fields
If the second element in the array is your sentinel value, write the original line to the writer
Repeat yourself until you have reached the end of file (ReadLine will return Nothing, or null for those c# folk).
Close and dispose of your stream objects.
If you aren't sure of the format, you will want to take the hit and use the TextFieldParser as mentioned in an earlier comment.

So while its not using an array to search a file, what I ended up doing works just as well. I ended up using the split method thanks to #Martin Soles.
Here is what I came up with:
Sub Main()
Dim intCount As Integer = 1
Dim words As String
Dim split As String()
Using MyReader As New Microsoft.VisualBasic.
FileIO.TextFieldParser(
"I:\Games, Events, & Promotions\FRP\Back End\Approved.txt")
MyReader.TextFieldType = FileIO.FieldType.Delimited
MyReader.SetDelimiters(",")
Dim currentRow As String()
While Not MyReader.EndOfData
Try
currentRow = MyReader.ReadFields()
Dim currentField As String
For Each currentField In currentRow
words = currentField
split = words.Split(New [Char]() {CChar(vbTab)})
For Each s As String In split
If intCount = 2 Then
Dim file As System.IO.StreamWriter
file = My.Computer.FileSystem.OpenTextFileWriter("I:\Games, Events, & Promotions\FRP\Back End\" & s & ".txt", True)
file.WriteLine(currentField)
file.Close()
End If
intCount = intCount + 1
Next s
intCount = 1
Next
Catch ex As Microsoft.VisualBasic.
FileIO.MalformedLineException
MsgBox("Line " & ex.Message &
"is not valid and will be skipped.")
End Try
End While
End Using
End Sub 'Main
Thank you guys for the suggestions.
For right now the split method will work for what is needed.

Related

Trying to close textfile after line is read

Im trying to output the data from the second line of my textfile to a datagridview but when doing so it is also outputting every line after the the second line. This is what I have tried. Thanks
Dim lines = IO.File.ReadAllLines(OrderID & ".txt")
For index = 1 To lines.Length - 1
Dim cells = lines(index).Split(","c)
dgvOutput.Rows.Add(cells)
FileClose()
It's outputting every line after the second line, because that's what you're telling it to do when you iterate through the array of strings returns from ReadAllLines.
IO.File.ReadAllLines does not leave an output stream open. The file is closed. What it does do, is return a zero-based (by default) array of the contents of the file, with line breaks being the delimiter for the split.
To just get the contents of the second line, using ReadAllLines, this is what you need:
Dim lines = IO.File.ReadAllLines(OrderID & ".txt")
If lines.length >= 2 Then
Dim cells = lines(1).Split(","c)
dgvOutput.Rows.Add(cells)
End If
Now, that does have the overhead of reading the entire file in. If you open the file using a reader object, then you only need to read the first and second lines of the file to get that second line.
That would be something like this:
Dim reader as StreamReader = My.Computer.FileSystem.OpenTextFileReader(OrderId & ".txt")
Dim a as String
' This reads the first line, which we throw away
reader.ReadLine()
a = reader.ReadLine()
reader.Close()
Dim cells = a.Split(","c)
dgvOutput.Rows.Add(cells)
You would need to test your explicit circumstances to determine which is better for what you're trying to do.
Your loop is executed over all lines skipping just the first line.
While I cannot see what happen in the FileClose call it seems to not have any sense because ReadAllLines has already closed the file.
You can get the second line of your file with a single line of code
Dim line as String = File.ReadLines(OrderID & ".txt").Skip(1).Take(1).FirstOrDefault()
' this check is required to avoid problems with files containing 0 or 1 line
if line IsNot Nothing Then
Dim cells = line.Split(","c)
dgvOutput.Rows.Add(cells)
End If
Notice that I have replaced the ReadAllLines with ReadLines. This is better because using this method you don't read all lines when you need only the second one (if it exists). More info at ReadLines vs ReadAllLines
Dim lines = IO.File.ReadAllLines(OrderID & ".txt")
Dim SecondLine = lines(1)
File.ReadAllLines opens and closes the file for you so there is not need to add code to close it.

TextFieldParser not skipping .CommentTokens-Lines

Following this, I use a TextFieldParser to read a csv File:
Sub imp1(path As String)
With New TextFieldParser("C:\matrix1.csv")
.TextFieldType = FileIO.FieldType.Delimited
.Delimiters = New String() {";"}
.CommentTokens = New String() {"'"}
Debug.Print(.ReadToEnd)
' some more code to read the contents into a 2d-array
End with
End Sub
After setting .CommentTokens = New String() {"'"} I expected lines with leading single quotes being skipped.
However, from what I gather there is no difference at all when reading a csv like the following:
'comment1
1;0.5;0.9;0.3
0.5;1;0.6;0.2
0.9;0.6;1;0.1
0.3;0.2;0.1;1
I tried replacing the single quote ' with several common comment-characters (#, \, \*), both with and without a following blanks - still not getting the desired results.
In your code you are using TextFieldParser.ReadToEnd which simply returns the complete remaining text and does not ignore comments. This is documented:
The ReadToEnd method does not ignore blank lines and comments.
If you would use ReadFields the comments would be ignored (MS example):
While Not MyReader.EndOfData
Try
currentRow = MyReader.ReadFields()
' Include code here to handle the row.
Catch ex As Microsoft.VisualBasic.FileIO.MalformedLineException
MsgBox("Line " & ex.Message &
" is invalid. Skipping")
End Try
End While

Visual Basic Append to a specific point in a text file

I am currently trying to manipulate a line in a file that we are using to retain data, using comma delimiters. For example -
121,1212, XJAY,Sean K,Kean S,AAAA-BBBB-AAAA-BBBB-AAAA
12456,987654,WYST,Steve Jobs,Bill Gates,CAAA-BBBB-AAAA-BBBB-AAAA
If I assume that the last line is always a unique code, is it possible to identify that line in the text file and append it with another field?
Prior research has been reading through the APIs for StreamReader and StreamWriter, and looking through other StackOverflow questions, however most questions seem focused on just appending to the end of the file, or in different languages!
As always thank you for your time, and if there is anything I've left off please let me know!
You can't manipulate a line in a file in any reasonably easy way.
There are no methods to work with lines in a file, because files are not line based. They are not even character based. The bytes in the file are decoded into characters, then the line break characters are recognised and the characters can be split into lines.
The easiest way to manipulate a line is to read the entire file into a string array, change the string that you want change, then write the entire string array to the file.
Example:
Dim fileName As String = "c:\data.txt"
Dim lines As String() = File.ReadAllLines(fileName)
For i As Integer = 0 To lines.Length - 1
Dim line As String = lines(i)
If line.StartsWith("12456,") Then
lines(i) = line & ",More data"
End If
Next
File.WriteAllLines(fileName, lines)
If you are looking for a way to parse Each line with StreamReader and StreamWriter: Here it is:
'You will need Imports System.IO
Dim TheNewFile As String
Dim MyLine As String
Dim MyStream2 As New FileStream("C:\Your Directory\YourFile.txt", FileMode.Open)
Dim MyReader As New StreamReader(MyStream2)
Dim MySettings As New StringReader(MyReader.ReadToEnd)
MyReader.BaseStream.Seek(0, SeekOrigin.Begin)
MyReader.Close()
MyStream2.Close()
Try
Do
MyLine = MySettings.ReadLine
'This if statement is an exit parameter. It can be if it contains or if 5 consecutive lines are nothing. It could be a number of things
If MyLine Is Nothing Then Exit Do
'This is the file you will write. You could do if MyLine = "Test" Then ........... append whatever and however you need to
TheNewFile = TheNewFile & MyLine & vbCrLf
Loop
Catch ex As Exception
MsgBox(ex.ToString())
End Try
'-----------------Write The new file!!!----------------
Dim MyStream3 As New FileStream("C:\Where you want to write New File\NewFileName.txt", FileMode.Create)
Dim MyWriter3 As New StreamWriter(MyStream3)
MyWriter3.Write(TheNewFile & "Test")
MyWriter3.Close()
MyStream3.Close()

StreamReader not finding end of file

I simply need to read lines from a text file and show them. When I run this I can see that id does what I want, but after it reads the last value it just shows a blank form on my screen and does not move on. It seems like it can't find the end of the file or something. I don't get an error.
Using sr As New System.IO.StreamReader(Application.StartupPath & "\myfile.cfg")
Dim Line As String = ""
Dim i As Integer = 0
Dim temp_array As Array
Do While Line IsNot Nothing
Line = sr.ReadLine
temp_array = Line.Split("=")
'MessageBox.Show(temp_array(0))
Loop
End Using
That is bad code because you're actually going to use Line before testing whether it's Nothing. Here are two good options for looping through the lines of a text file:
Using reader As New StreamReader(filePath)
Dim line As String
Do Until reader.EndOfStream
line = reader.ReadLine()
'...
Loop
End Using
For Each line In File.ReadLines(filePath)
'...
Next
As you can see, the second is far more concise but it does require .NET 4.0 or later.

Better way to check and update line in file VB.NET

I am trying to check a bunch of files that should have a leading | delimiter but sometimes don't. If the first line doesn't have the |, the rest of the file won't, if it does have it, then the rest of the file will.
So I'm checking the first line which works and enters the update logic, which advances to the next row once I read the line in. So I added a writer.Write before I go into the Do While loop and it works, but it seems like there would be a better way of doing this.
Here is my code:
Dim fileList As FileInfo() = dirList.GetFiles
For Each fiName In fileList
sFullName = fiName.FullName
sFileName = Path.GetFileNameWithoutExtension(fiName.ToString)
sDir = fiName.DirectoryName
Dim reader As New StreamReader(sFullName)
Dim line As String = reader.ReadLine()
If Not line.StartsWith("|") Then
Dim sNewFullName As String = sDir + "\" + sFileName + "_Temp.txt"
Dim writer As New StreamWriter(sNewFullName)
Dim sLine As String
sLine = "|" + line + System.Environment.NewLine
writer.Write(sLine)
Do While reader.Peek() <> -1
sLine = "|" + reader.ReadLine() + System.Environment.NewLine
writer.Write(sLine)
Loop
writer.Close()
reader.Close()
File.Delete(sFullName)
File.Move(sNewFullName, sFullName)
End If
reader.Close()
Next fiName
Any help or guidance would be much appreciated, Thank you in advance...
This way works just fine. There are several other ways to do it, but it's a matter of opinion on which is better, based on simplicity, portability, performance, maintainability, etc.
For example, you could read the entire file into a string using file.readalltext, then change all VBCRLF (or whether the line end character is) to VBCRLF & "|", then write it all out with file.writealltext.
If it was me, and if it works, I'd leave it unless I just wanted to learn some other methods. Some would argue for hours for another method that is better, but it may be more productive to move on to the next project.