read_lines
Beginner friendly method
This method is NOT efficient. It's here for beginners who can't understand the efficient method yet.
use std::fs::File;
use std::io::{ self, BufRead, BufReader };
fn read_lines(filename: String) -> io::Lines<BufReader<File>> {
// Open the file in read-only mode.
let file = File::open(filename).unwrap();
// Read the file line by line, and return an iterator of the lines of the file.
return io::BufReader::new(file).lines();
}
fn main() {
// Stores the iterator of lines of the file in lines variable.
let lines = read_lines("./hosts".to_string());
// Iterate over the lines of the file, and in this case print them.
for line in lines {
println!("{}", line.unwrap());
}
}
Running this program simply prints the lines individually.
$ echo -e "127.0.0.1\n192.168.0.1\n" > hosts
$ rustc read_lines.rs && ./read_lines
127.0.0.1
192.168.0.1
Efficient method
The method lines()
returns an iterator over the lines
of a file.
File::open
expects a generic, AsRef<Path>
. That's what
read_lines()
expects as input.
use std::fs::File;
use std::io::{self, BufRead};
use std::path::Path;
fn main() {
// File hosts must exist in current path before this produces output
if let Ok(lines) = read_lines("./hosts") {
// Consumes the iterator, returns an (Optional) String
for line in lines {
if let Ok(ip) = line {
println!("{}", ip);
}
}
}
}
// The output is wrapped in a Result to allow matching on errors
// Returns an Iterator to the Reader of the lines of the file.
fn read_lines<P>(filename: P) -> io::Result<io::Lines<io::BufReader<File>>>
where P: AsRef<Path>, {
let file = File::open(filename)?;
Ok(io::BufReader::new(file).lines())
}
Running this program simply prints the lines individually.
$ echo -e "127.0.0.1\n192.168.0.1\n" > hosts
$ rustc read_lines.rs && ./read_lines
127.0.0.1
192.168.0.1
This process is more efficient than creating a String
in memory
especially working with larger files.