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Q: getline stops reading in a seemingly random location

zstreetI am parsing a file and am testing with different versions of the file. Some versions print off a bunch of junk in the beginning and I thought my code would handle that version but it stops reading in a seemingly random location so I am at a lost as to the cause. Here is my code: void readFile(...

You obviously have not included all the information. Which is a mistake it is hard to decipher a problem using ESP. But I am guessing. "more junk" contains the work "Atoms".
If you want real help you need to provide a minimal working example showing the failure. This means a compilable program and the input data. Preferably you would also show the expected output.
Please don't assume a mistake. I added "more junk" because it's more garbage and it does not include the pattern "Atoms".
That's not the point. The point is that there is so much missing information that nobody can help you without using ESP. Anything people said would simply be a guess. We are missing input data we are missing type information. The only way to help you is if we can reproduce your issue. What you have provided does not get us any closer to reproducing the issue so you can't be helped at this point. Let's assume that getline() is working as expected and that the problem is with your code and/or data and your understanding of it.
No useful answer for you, but playing around with this showed me that a header file in my gcc install has been eaten. Now fixing and thank you for helping me find this when I wasn't working on anything time critical.
@Martin I added the left out data to calm your nerve. The function and input files above is all that is needed to reproduce the two outputs given.
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@zstreet Actually nots not. Because that code does not compile. I suggest you copy and paste the code that is actually causing the error (because that is not it). Also to be polite its nice to add the extra code that makes things easier for people trying to help you.
After fixing the code it works as expected. So the bug is not in the code you posted. You must have posted the wrong code.
What compiler and version? There's a lot of old gcc4.8 still floating around out there and with wonky regex.
Fixed broken compiler (and got a shiny, new gcc10.1 in the process). Fixed a couple typos and also get reasonable output.
@Martin what did you have to do to fix it? Again, please don't assume incompetence. I did copy and paste. We could be using different compilers, etc.
ParticleString = > ParticlesString (fixed spelling of variable name).
Notice the missing close bracket here: while(std::getline(source,line){
@zstreet You did not copy and paste this from working code. You may have copied and pasted it but not from the code that compiled. No matter what compiler you are using this is going to be the same.
Ah okay fixed it. I am entirely a vim user so using this interface is easy to screw it up with my hotkey muscle memory. Putting the syntax error aside, your code does indeed read all the way until the "Atoms" pattern with the "[Molpro variables]" junk section?
This is why I am at a lost because this function does work for the file that doesn't have that section...
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You need to provide a complete small example program and complete input that demonstrates the error. What you've given seems to work, but every assumption we make in our test cases could change the outcome and hide the error. Try to whittle the code and the sample data down to the minimum necessary, because that limits the hiding space for the bug.
Indeed the whittled code and input is above. The fact that it does work for you is perhaps a clue. I appreciate your help @user4581301
That's whittled too much, I'm afraid. You should provide a simple main that calls the function, the headers you use, etc... Everything a needed for someone to paste your program into an editor, save, compile, run, and see exactly what you are seeing. If you do that and we paste and run and DON'T see what you see, we have to start looking at the tools. Compiler, compiler version, etc... digging down deeper until we find the difference.
@user4581301 noted, I will provide a simple main and headers in the future.
Regular expressions are overkill for this kind of trivial text matching. Just use input.find("Atoms").
This doesn't addresss the question, but get in the habit of initializing objects with meaningful values rather than default initializing them and immediately overwriting the default values. In this case, that means changingstd::ifstream source; source.open(filename); to std::ifstream source(filename);. And you don't need to call source.close();. The destructor will do that.
@Pete Becker thank you for the habit modification. Yes I agree regex is overkill for this so for the initial parsing for these keys, I may use the find method. So instead of if(std::regex_search(line,match,Atomstxt)) it would just be if(line.find("Atoms"))?... Certainly more readable...
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Yes, if(line.find("Atoms")). Sorry about mis-naming the string in my previous comment.
Yeah, sorry, that should be `if(line.find(“Atoms”) != line.end())”.

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