exercises/exercises/106_files.zig
2024-11-08 13:29:44 +01:00

92 lines
3.5 KiB
Zig

//
// Until now, we've only been printing our output in the console,
// which is good enough for fighting aliens and hermit bookkeeping.
//
// However, many other tasks require some interaction with the file system,
// which is the underlying structure for organizing files on your computer.
//
// The file system provides a hierarchical structure for storing files
// by organizing them into directories, which hold files and other directories,
// thus creating a tree structure that can be navigated.
//
// Fortunately, the Zig Standard Library provides a simple API for interacting
// with the file system, see the detail documentation here:
//
// https://ziglang.org/documentation/master/std/#std.fs
//
// In this exercise, we'll try to:
// - create a new directory,
// - open a file in the directory,
// - write to the file.
//
// import std as always
const std = @import("std");
pub fn main() !void {
// first we get the current working directory
const cwd: std.fs.Dir = std.fs.cwd();
// then we'll try to make a new directory /output/
// to store our output files.
cwd.makeDir("output") catch |e| switch (e) {
// there is a chance you might want to run this
// program more than once and the path might already
// have been created, so we'll have to handle this error
// by doing nothing
//
// we want to catch error.PathAlreadyExists and do nothing
??? => {},
// if there's any other unexpected error we just propagate it through
else => return e,
};
// then we'll try to open our freshly created directory
// wait a minute...
// opening a directory might fail!
// what should we do here?
var output_dir: std.fs.Dir = cwd.openDir("output", .{});
defer output_dir.close();
// we try to open the file `zigling.txt`,
// and propagate any error up
const file: std.fs.File = try output_dir.createFile("zigling.txt", .{});
// it is a good habit to close a file after you are done with it
// so that other programs can read it and prevent data corruption
// but here we are not yet done writing to the file
// if only there were a keyword in Zig that
// allowed you to "defer" code execution to the end of the scope...
file.close();
// you are not allowed to move these two lines above the file closing line!
const byte_written = try file.write("It's zigling time!");
std.debug.print("Successfully wrote {d} bytes.\n", .{byte_written});
}
// to check if you actually write to the file, you can either,
// 1. open the file in your text editor, or
// 2. print the content of the file in the console with the following command
// >> cat ./output/zigling.txt
//
//
// More on Creating files
//
// notice in:
// ... try output_dir.createFile("zigling.txt", .{});
// ^^^
// we passed this anonymous struct to the function call
//
// this is the struct `CreateFlag` with default fields
// {
// read: bool = false,
// truncate: bool = true,
// exclusive: bool = false,
// lock: Lock = .none,
// lock_nonblocking: bool = false,
// mode: Mode = default_mode
// }
//
// Question:
// - what should you do if you want to also read the file after opening it?
// - go to the documentation of the struct `std.fs.Dir` here:
// https://ziglang.org/documentation/master/std/#std.fs.Dir
// - can you find a function for opening a file? how about deleting a file?
// - what kind of options can you use with those functions?