992ff3310e
git-svn-id: https://svn.wxwidgets.org/svn/wx/wxWidgets/trunk@57843 c3d73ce0-8a6f-49c7-b76d-6d57e0e08775
447 lines
15 KiB
Objective-C
447 lines
15 KiB
Objective-C
/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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// Name: file.h
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// Purpose: interface of wxTempFile, wxFile
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// Author: wxWidgets team
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// RCS-ID: $Id$
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// Licence: wxWindows license
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/////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////////
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/**
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We redefine these constants here because S_IREAD &c are _not_ standard.
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However, we do assume that the values correspond to the Unix umask bits.
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*/
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enum wxPosixPermissions
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{
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/// standard Posix names for these permission flags
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//@{
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wxS_IRUSR = 00400,
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wxS_IWUSR = 00200,
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wxS_IXUSR = 00100,
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wxS_IRGRP = 00040,
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wxS_IWGRP = 00020,
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wxS_IXGRP = 00010,
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wxS_IROTH = 00004,
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wxS_IWOTH = 00002,
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wxS_IXOTH = 00001,
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//@}
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/// longer but more readable synonims for the constants above
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//@{
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wxPOSIX_USER_READ = wxS_IRUSR,
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wxPOSIX_USER_WRITE = wxS_IWUSR,
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wxPOSIX_USER_EXECUTE = wxS_IXUSR,
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wxPOSIX_GROUP_READ = wxS_IRGRP,
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wxPOSIX_GROUP_WRITE = wxS_IWGRP,
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wxPOSIX_GROUP_EXECUTE = wxS_IXGRP,
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wxPOSIX_OTHERS_READ = wxS_IROTH,
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wxPOSIX_OTHERS_WRITE = wxS_IWOTH,
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wxPOSIX_OTHERS_EXECUTE = wxS_IXOTH,
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//@}
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/// Default mode for the new files: allow reading/writing them to everybody but
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/// the effective file mode will be set after ANDing this value with umask and
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/// so won't include wxS_IW{GRP,OTH} for the default 022 umask value
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wxS_DEFAULT = (wxPOSIX_USER_READ | wxPOSIX_USER_WRITE | \
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wxPOSIX_GROUP_READ | wxPOSIX_GROUP_WRITE | \
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wxPOSIX_OTHERS_READ | wxPOSIX_OTHERS_WRITE),
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/// Default mode for the new directories (see wxFileName::Mkdir): allow
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/// reading/writing/executing them to everybody, but just like wxS_DEFAULT
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/// the effective directory mode will be set after ANDing this value with umask
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wxS_DIR_DEFAULT = (wxPOSIX_USER_READ | wxPOSIX_USER_WRITE | wxPOSIX_USER_EXECUTE | \
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wxPOSIX_GROUP_READ | wxPOSIX_GROUP_WRITE | wxPOSIX_GROUP_EXECUTE | \
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wxPOSIX_OTHERS_READ | wxPOSIX_OTHERS_WRITE | wxPOSIX_OTHERS_EXECUTE)
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};
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/**
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@class wxTempFile
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wxTempFile provides a relatively safe way to replace the contents of the
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existing file. The name is explained by the fact that it may be also used as
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just a temporary file if you don't replace the old file contents.
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Usually, when a program replaces the contents of some file it first opens it for
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writing, thus losing all of the old data and then starts recreating it.
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This approach is not very safe because during the regeneration of the file bad
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things may happen: the program may find that there is an internal error preventing
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it from completing file generation, the user may interrupt it (especially if file
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generation takes long time) and, finally, any other external interrupts (power
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supply failure or a disk error) will leave you without either the original file
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or the new one.
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wxTempFile addresses this problem by creating a temporary file which is meant to
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replace the original file - but only after it is fully written. So, if the user
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interrupts the program during the file generation, the old file won't be lost.
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Also, if the program discovers itself that it doesn't want to replace the old
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file there is no problem - in fact, wxTempFile will @b not replace the old
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file by default, you should explicitly call wxTempFile::Commit() to do it.
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Calling wxTempFile::Discard() explicitly discards any modifications: it
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closes and deletes the temporary file and leaves the original file unchanged.
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If you call neither Commit() nor Discard(), the destructor will
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call Discard() automatically.
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To summarize: if you want to replace another file, create an instance of
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wxTempFile passing the name of the file to be replaced to the constructor.
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(You may also use default constructor and pass the file name to wxTempFile::Open.)
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Then you can write to wxTempFile using wxFile-like functions and later call
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wxTempFile::Commit() to replace the old file (and close this one) or call
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wxTempFile::Discard() to cancel the modifications.
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@library{wxbase}
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@category{file}
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*/
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class wxTempFile
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{
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public:
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/**
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Associates wxTempFile with the file to be replaced and opens it.
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You should use IsOpened() to verify that the constructor succeeded.
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*/
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wxTempFile(const wxString& strName);
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/**
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Destructor calls Discard() if temporary file is still open.
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*/
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~wxTempFile();
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/**
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Validate changes: deletes the old file of name m_strName and renames the new
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file to the old name. Returns @true if both actions succeeded.
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If @false is returned it may unfortunately mean two quite different things:
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either that the old file couldn't be deleted or that the new file
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couldn't be renamed to the old name.
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*/
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bool Commit();
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/**
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Discard changes: the old file contents are not changed, the temporary
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file is deleted.
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*/
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void Discard();
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/**
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Returns @true if the file was successfully opened.
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*/
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bool IsOpened() const;
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/**
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Returns the length of the file.
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This method may return wxInvalidOffset if the length couldn't be
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determined or 0 even for non-empty files if the file is not seekable.
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In general, the only way to determine if the file for which this function
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returns 0 is really empty or not is to try reading from it.
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*/
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wxFileOffset Length() const;
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/**
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Open the temporary file, returns @true on success, @false if an error
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occurred.
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@a strName is the name of file to be replaced. The temporary file is always
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created in the directory where @a strName is. In particular, if @a strName
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doesn't include the path, it is created in the current directory and the
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program should have write access to it for the function to succeed.
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*/
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bool Open(const wxString& strName);
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/**
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Seeks to the specified position.
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*/
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wxFileOffset Seek(wxFileOffset ofs,
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wxSeekMode mode = wxFromStart);
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/**
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Returns the current position or wxInvalidOffset if file is not opened or
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if another error occurred.
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*/
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wxFileOffset Tell() const;
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/**
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Write to the file, return @true on success, @false on failure.
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The second argument is only meaningful in Unicode build of wxWidgets when
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@a conv is used to convert @a str to multibyte representation.
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*/
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bool Write(const wxString& str,
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const wxMBConv& conv = wxConvUTF8);
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};
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/**
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@class wxFile
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A wxFile performs raw file I/O. This is a very small class designed to
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minimize the overhead of using it - in fact, there is hardly any overhead at
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all, but using it brings you automatic error checking and hides differences
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between platforms and compilers. wxFile also automatically closes the file in
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its destructor so you won't forget to do so.
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wxFile is a wrapper around @c file descriptor. - see also wxFFile for a
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wrapper around @c FILE structure.
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::wxFileOffset is used by the wxFile functions which require offsets as
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parameter or return them. If the platform supports it, wxFileOffset is a
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typedef for a native 64 bit integer, otherwise a 32 bit integer is used for
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::wxFileOffset.
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@library{wxbase}
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@category{file}
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*/
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class wxFile
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{
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public:
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/**
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The OpenMode enumeration defines the different modes for opening a file with wxFile.
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It is also used with wxFile::Access function.
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*/
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enum OpenMode {
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/** Open file for reading or test if it can be opened for reading with Access() */
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read,
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/** Open file for writing deleting the contents of the file if it already exists
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or test if it can be opened for writing with Access(). */
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write,
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/** Open file for reading and writing; can not be used with Access() */
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read_write,
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/** Open file for appending: the file is opened for writing, but the old contents
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of the file are not erased and the file pointer is initially placed at the end
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of the file; can not be used with Access().
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This is the same as OpenMode::write if the file doesn't exist.
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*/
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write_append,
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/**
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Open the file securely for writing (Uses O_EXCL | O_CREAT).
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Will fail if the file already exists, else create and open it atomically.
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Useful for opening temporary files without being vulnerable to race exploits.
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*/
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write_excl
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};
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/**
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Standard file descriptors
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*/
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enum { fd_invalid = -1, fd_stdin, fd_stdout, fd_stderr };
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/**
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Default constructor.
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*/
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wxFile();
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/**
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Opens a file with a filename.
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@param filename
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The filename.
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@param mode
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The mode in which to open the file.
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*/
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wxFile(const wxString& filename,
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wxFile::OpenMode mode = wxFile::read);
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/**
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Associates the file with the given file descriptor, which has already been
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opened. See Attach() for the list of predefined descriptors.
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@param fd
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An existing file descriptor.
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*/
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wxFile(int fd);
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/**
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Destructor will close the file.
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@note This destructor is not virtual so you should not use wxFile polymorphically.
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*/
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~wxFile();
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/**
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This function verifies if we may access the given file in specified mode.
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Only values of @c wxFile::read or @c wxFile::write really make sense here.
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*/
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static bool Access(const wxString& name, wxFile::OpenMode mode);
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/**
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Attaches an existing file descriptor to the wxFile object.
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Examples of predefined file descriptors are 0, 1 and 2 which correspond to
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stdin, stdout and stderr (and have symbolic names of @c wxFile::fd_stdin,
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@c wxFile::fd_stdout and @c wxFile::fd_stderr).
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The descriptor should be already opened and it will be closed by wxFile
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object.
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*/
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void Attach(int fd);
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/**
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Closes the file.
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*/
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bool Close();
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/**
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Creates a file for writing.
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If the file already exists, setting @b overwrite to @true will ensure
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it is overwritten.
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@a access may be an OR combination of the ::wxPosixPermissions enumeration
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values.
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*/
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bool Create(const wxString& filename,
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bool overwrite = false,
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int access = wxS_DEFAULT);
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/**
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Get back a file descriptor from wxFile object - the caller is responsible for
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closing the file if this descriptor is opened.
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IsOpened() will return @false after call to Detach().
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*/
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void Detach();
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/**
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Returns @true if the end of the file has been reached.
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Note that the behaviour of the file pointer-based class wxFFile is
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different as wxFFile::Eof() will return @true here only if an
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attempt has been made to read @b past the last byte of the file, while
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wxFile::Eof() will return @true even before such attempt is made if the
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file pointer is at the last position in the file.
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Note also that this function doesn't work on unseekable file descriptors
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(examples include pipes, terminals and sockets under Unix) and an attempt to
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use it will result in an error message.
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So, to read the entire file into memory, you should write a loop which uses
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Read() repeatedly and tests its return condition instead of using Eof()
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as this will not work for special files under Unix.
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*/
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bool Eof() const;
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/**
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Returns @true if the given name specifies an existing regular file
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(not a directory or a link).
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*/
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static bool Exists(const wxString& filename);
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/**
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Flushes the file descriptor.
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Note that Flush() is not implemented on some Windows compilers due to a
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missing fsync function, which reduces the usefulness of this function
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(it can still be called but it will do nothing on unsupported compilers).
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*/
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bool Flush();
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/**
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Returns the type of the file.
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*/
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wxFileKind GetKind() const;
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/**
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Returns @true if the file has been opened.
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*/
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bool IsOpened() const;
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/**
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Returns the length of the file.
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*/
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wxFileOffset Length() const;
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/**
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Opens the file, returning @true if successful.
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@param filename
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The filename.
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@param mode
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The mode in which to open the file.
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@param access
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An OR-combination of ::wxPosixPermissions enumeration values.
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*/
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bool Open(const wxString& filename, wxFile::OpenMode mode = wxFile::read,
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int access = wxS_DEFAULT);
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/**
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Reads from the file into a memory buffer.
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@param buffer
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Buffer to write in
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@param count
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Bytes to read
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@return The number of bytes read, or the symbol wxInvalidOffset.
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*/
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ssize_t Read(void* buffer, size_t count);
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/**
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Seeks to the specified position.
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@param ofs
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Offset to seek to.
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@param mode
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One of wxFromStart, wxFromEnd, wxFromCurrent.
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@return The actual offset position achieved, or wxInvalidOffset on
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failure.
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*/
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wxFileOffset Seek(wxFileOffset ofs,
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wxSeekMode mode = wxFromStart);
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/**
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Moves the file pointer to the specified number of bytes relative to the
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end of the file. For example, @c SeekEnd(-5) would position the pointer 5
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bytes before the end.
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@param ofs
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Number of bytes before the end of the file.
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@return The actual offset position achieved, or wxInvalidOffset on
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failure.
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*/
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wxFileOffset SeekEnd(wxFileOffset ofs = 0);
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/**
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Returns the current position or wxInvalidOffset if file is not opened or
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if another error occurred.
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*/
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wxFileOffset Tell() const;
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/**
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Write data to the file (descriptor).
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@param buffer
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Buffer from which to read data
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@param count
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Number of bytes to write
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@return The number of bytes written.
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*/
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size_t Write(const void *buffer, size_t count);
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/**
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Writes the contents of the string to the file, returns @true on success.
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The second argument is only meaningful in Unicode build of wxWidgets when
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@a conv is used to convert @a s to a multibyte representation.
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Note that this method only works with @c NUL-terminated strings, if you want
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to write data with embedded @c NULs to the file you should use the other
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Write() overload.
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*/
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bool Write(const wxString& s, const wxMBConv& conv = wxConvUTF8);
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/**
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Returns the file descriptor associated with the file.
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*/
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int fd() const;
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};
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