module In_channel: In_channel
typet =
in_channel
The type of input channel.
typeopen_flag =
open_flag
=
| |
Open_rdonly |
(* | open for reading. | *) |
| |
Open_wronly |
(* | open for writing. | *) |
| |
Open_append |
(* | open for appending: always write at end of file. | *) |
| |
Open_creat |
(* | create the file if it does not exist. | *) |
| |
Open_trunc |
(* | empty the file if it already exists. | *) |
| |
Open_excl |
(* | fail if Open_creat and the file already exists. | *) |
| |
Open_binary |
(* | open in binary mode (no conversion). | *) |
| |
Open_text |
(* | open in text mode (may perform conversions). | *) |
| |
Open_nonblock |
(* | open in non-blocking mode. | *) |
Opening modes for In_channel.open_gen
.
val stdin : t
The standard input for the process.
val open_bin : string -> t
Open the named file for reading, and return a new input channel on that file, positioned at the beginning of the file.
val open_text : string -> t
Same as In_channel.open_bin
, but the file is opened in text mode, so that newline
translation takes place during reads. On operating systems that do not
distinguish between text mode and binary mode, this function behaves like
In_channel.open_bin
.
val open_gen : open_flag list -> int -> string -> t
open_gen mode perm filename
opens the named file for reading, as described
above. The extra arguments mode
and perm
specify the opening mode and
file permissions. In_channel.open_text
and In_channel.open_bin
are special cases of this
function.
val with_open_bin : string -> (t -> 'a) -> 'a
with_open_bin fn f
opens a channel ic
on file fn
and returns f
. After
icf
returns, either with a value or by raising an exception, ic
is guaranteed to be closed.
val with_open_text : string -> (t -> 'a) -> 'a
Like In_channel.with_open_bin
, but the channel is opened in text mode (see
In_channel.open_text
).
val with_open_gen : open_flag list -> int -> string -> (t -> 'a) -> 'a
Like In_channel.with_open_bin
, but can specify the opening mode and file permission,
in case the file must be created (see In_channel.open_gen
).
val close : t -> unit
Close the given channel. Input functions raise a Sys_error
exception when
they are applied to a closed input channel, except In_channel.close
, which does
nothing when applied to an already closed channel.
val close_noerr : t -> unit
Same as In_channel.close
, but ignore all errors.
val input_char : t -> char option
Read one character from the given input channel. Returns None
if there
are no more characters to read.
val input_byte : t -> int option
Same as In_channel.input_char
, but return the 8-bit integer representing the
character. Returns None
if the end of file was reached.
val input_line : t -> string option
input_line ic
reads characters from ic
until a newline or the end of
file is reached. Returns the string of all characters read, without the
newline (if any). Returns None
if the end of the file has been reached.
In particular, this will be the case if the last line of input is empty.
A newline is the character \n
unless the file is open in text mode and
Sys.win32
is true
in which case it is the sequence of characters
\r\n
.
val really_input_string : t -> int -> string option
really_input_string ic len
reads len
characters from channel ic
and
returns them in a new string. Returns None
if the end of file is reached
before len
characters have been read.
If the same channel is read concurrently by multiple threads, the returned string is not guaranteed to contain contiguous characters from the input.
val input_all : t -> string
input_all ic
reads all remaining data from ic
.
If the same channel is read concurrently by multiple threads, the returned string is not guaranteed to contain contiguous characters from the input.
val input_lines : t -> string list
input_lines ic
reads lines using In_channel.input_line
until the end of file is reached. It returns the list of all
lines read, in the order they were read. The newline characters
that terminate lines are not included in the returned strings.
Empty lines produce empty strings.
val input : t -> bytes -> int -> int -> int
input ic buf pos len
reads up to len
characters from the given channel
ic
, storing them in byte sequence buf
, starting at character number
pos
. It returns the actual number of characters read, between 0 and len
(inclusive). A return value of 0 means that the end of file was reached.
Use In_channel.really_input
to read exactly len
characters.
Invalid_argument
if pos
and len
do not designate a valid range of
buf
.val really_input : t -> bytes -> int -> int -> unit option
really_input ic buf pos len
reads len
characters from channel ic
,
storing them in byte sequence buf
, starting at character number pos
.
Returns None
if the end of file is reached before len
characters have
been read.
If the same channel is read concurrently by multiple threads, the bytes
read by really_input
are not guaranteed to be contiguous.
Invalid_argument
if pos
and len
do not designate a valid range of
buf
.val fold_lines : ('acc -> string -> 'acc) -> 'acc -> t -> 'acc
fold_lines f init ic
reads lines from ic
using In_channel.input_line
until the end of file is reached, and successively passes each line
to function f
in the style of a fold.
More precisely, if lines l1, ..., lN
are read,
fold_lines f init ic
computes f (... (f (f init l1) l2) ...) lN
.
If f
has no side effects, this is equivalent to
List.fold_left f init (In_channel.input_lines ic)
,
but is more efficient since it does not construct the list of all
lines read.
val seek : t -> int64 -> unit
seek chan pos
sets the current reading position to pos
for channel
chan
. This works only for regular files. On files of other kinds, the
behavior is unspecified.
val pos : t -> int64
Return the current reading position for the given channel. For files opened
in text mode under Windows, the returned position is approximate (owing to
end-of-line conversion); in particular, saving the current position with
In_channel.pos
, then going back to this position using In_channel.seek
will not work. For
this programming idiom to work reliably and portably, the file must be
opened in binary mode.
val length : t -> int64
Return the size (number of characters) of the regular file on which the given channel is opened. If the channel is opened on a file that is not a regular file, the result is meaningless. The returned size does not take into account the end-of-line translations that can be performed when reading from a channel opened in text mode.
val set_binary_mode : t -> bool -> unit
set_binary_mode ic true
sets the channel ic
to binary mode: no
translations take place during input.
set_binary_mode ic false
sets the channel ic
to text mode: depending
on the operating system, some translations may take place during input. For
instance, under Windows, end-of-lines will be translated from \r\n
to
\n
.
This function has no effect under operating systems that do not distinguish between text mode and binary mode.
val isatty : t -> bool
isatty ic
is true
if ic
refers to a terminal or console window,
false
otherwise.
Reading the contents of a file:
let read_file file = In_channel.with_open_bin file In_channel.input_all
Reading a line from stdin:
let user_input () = In_channel.input_line In_channel.stdin