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Re: Accessing 8-bit bytes from a file using Cocoa
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Re: Accessing 8-bit bytes from a file using Cocoa


  • Subject: Re: Accessing 8-bit bytes from a file using Cocoa
  • From: Sherm Pendley <email@hidden>
  • Date: Mon, 1 May 2006 15:07:24 -0400

On May 1, 2006, at 8:17 AM, Phil Faber wrote:

One list at a time please. Not everyone here subscribes to the Yahoo list.

I want to be able to read from any file type (.txt, .doc, .xls, etc) one 'literal byte' (that is, a string of eight ones-and-zeros) at a time. The file could be any size. For each byte I want to be able to get the actual ASCII value of that byte (a number from zero to 255).

ASCII code points range from 0 to 127.

At the moment, I'm using C coding:

(fread(&oneByte,1,1,fp1) [where oneByte is defined as a 'char']

A char is not guaranteed to be one byte. The C standard specifies it as "at least 8 bits" in size - i.e., it's allowed to be more. If you want an 8-bit variable, no more nor less, use the size-specific type "uint8" instead.


(a) this only works for basic ASCII characters (for example, "A" appears as ASCII 65) but not non-standard characters (for example, "å" appears as ASCII -116 ... yes, MINUS 116)

You asked for a char, and that's what you got - integral types are signed by default, i.e. with high-order bit used to indicate signedness. In the case of an 8-bit char, that gives a range of -127 to 127. If you want an unsigned char, with a range of 0 to 255, you'll need to declare it as such.


(b) I suspect that it is better to achieve this task with Cocoa instead of C.

I often use NSData's +dataWithContentsOfMappedFile: to memory-map a file. Then I can simply call the returned instance's -bytes method to get a pointer to the data, and let the VM subsystem handle reading & writing pages as needed.


Can anyone please provide me with the most basic coding to achieve this in Cocoa?

Have a look at:

http://developer.apple.com/documentation/Cocoa/Conceptual/BinaryData/ index.html

sherm--

Cocoa programming in Perl: http://camelbones.sourceforge.net
Hire me! My resume: http://www.dot-app.org

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