QTextStream#
The QTextStream
class provides a convenient interface for reading and writing text. More…
Synopsis#
Functions#
def
atEnd
()def
autoDetectUnicode
()def
device
()def
encoding
()def
fieldAlignment
()def
fieldWidth
()def
flush
()def
generateByteOrderMark
()def
integerBase
()def
locale
()def
numberFlags
()def
__lshift__
(m)def
__lshift__
(i)def
__lshift__
(i)def
__lshift__
(f)def
__lshift__
(s)def
__lshift__
(arg__2)def
__lshift__
(array)def
__lshift__
(ch)def
__lshift__
(s)def
__lshift__
(ch)def
__rshift__
(array)def
padChar
()def
pos
()def
read
(maxlen)def
readAll
()def
readLine
([maxlen=0])def
readLineInto
(line[, maxlen=0])def
realNumberNotation
()def
realNumberPrecision
()def
reset
()def
resetStatus
()def
seek
(pos)def
setAutoDetectUnicode
(enabled)def
setDevice
(device)def
setEncoding
(encoding)def
setFieldAlignment
(alignment)def
setFieldWidth
(width)def
setGenerateByteOrderMark
(generate)def
setIntegerBase
(base)def
setLocale
(locale)def
setNumberFlags
(flags)def
setPadChar
(ch)def
setRealNumberNotation
(notation)def
setRealNumberPrecision
(precision)def
setStatus
(status)def
skipWhiteSpace
()def
status
()def
string
()
Note
This documentation may contain snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python. We always welcome contributions to the snippet translation. If you see an issue with the translation, you can also let us know by creating a ticket on https:/bugreports.qt.io/projects/PYSIDE
Detailed Description#
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
QTextStream
can operate on a QIODevice
, a QByteArray
or a QString
. Using QTextStream
‘s streaming operators, you can conveniently read and write words, lines and numbers. For generating text, QTextStream
supports formatting options for field padding and alignment, and formatting of numbers. Example:
data = QFile("output.txt") if data.open(QFile.WriteOnly | QFile.Truncate): out = QTextStream(data) out << "Result: " << qSetFieldWidth(10) << left << 3.14 << 2.7 # writes "Result: 3.14 2.7 "
It’s also common to use QTextStream
to read console input and write console output. QTextStream
is locale aware, and will automatically decode standard input using the correct encoding. Example:
stream = QTextStream(stdin) line = QString() while stream.readLineInto(line): ...
Besides using QTextStream
‘s constructors, you can also set the device or string QTextStream
operates on by calling setDevice()
or setString()
. You can seek to a position by calling seek()
, and atEnd()
will return true when there is no data left to be read. If you call flush()
, QTextStream
will empty all data from its write buffer into the device and call flush()
on the device.
Internally, QTextStream
uses a Unicode based buffer, and QStringConverter
is used by QTextStream
to automatically support different encodings. By default, UTF-8 is used for reading and writing, but you can also set the encoding by calling setEncoding()
. Automatic Unicode detection is also supported. When this feature is enabled (the default behavior), QTextStream
will detect the UTF-8, UTF-16 or the UTF-32 BOM (Byte Order Mark) and switch to the appropriate UTF encoding when reading. QTextStream
does not write a BOM by default, but you can enable this by calling setGenerateByteOrderMark
(true). When QTextStream
operates on a QString
directly, the encoding is disabled.
There are three general ways to use QTextStream
when reading text files:
Chunk by chunk, by calling
readLine()
orreadAll()
.Word by word.
QTextStream
supports streaming intoQString
s,QByteArray
s and char* buffers. Words are delimited by space, and leading white space is automatically skipped.Character by character, by streaming into
QChar
or char types. This method is often used for convenient input handling when parsing files, independent of character encoding and end-of-line semantics. To skip white space, callskipWhiteSpace()
.
Since the text stream uses a buffer, you should not read from the stream using the implementation of a superclass. For instance, if you have a QFile
and read from it directly using readLine()
instead of using the stream, the text stream’s internal position will be out of sync with the file’s position.
By default, when reading numbers from a stream of text, QTextStream
will automatically detect the number’s base representation. For example, if the number starts with “0x”, it is assumed to be in hexadecimal form. If it starts with the digits 1-9, it is assumed to be in decimal form, and so on. You can set the integer base, thereby disabling the automatic detection, by calling setIntegerBase()
. Example:
in = QTextStream("0x50 0x20") firstNumber, = int() in >> firstNumber # firstNumber == 80 in >> dec >> secondNumber # secondNumber == 0 ch = char() in >> ch # ch == 'x'
QTextStream
supports many formatting options for generating text. You can set the field width and pad character by calling setFieldWidth()
and setPadChar()
. Use setFieldAlignment()
to set the alignment within each field. For real numbers, call setRealNumberNotation()
and setRealNumberPrecision()
to set the notation ( SmartNotation
, ScientificNotation
, FixedNotation
) and precision in digits of the generated number. Some extra number formatting options are also available through setNumberFlags()
.
Like <iostream>
in the standard C++ library, QTextStream
also defines several global manipulator functions:
Manipulator
Description
bin
Same as
setIntegerBase
(2).
oct
Same as
setIntegerBase
(8).
dec
Same as
setIntegerBase
(10).
hex
Same as
setIntegerBase
(16).
showbase
Same as
setNumberFlags
(numberFlags()
|ShowBase
).
forcesign
Same as
setNumberFlags
(numberFlags()
|ForceSign
).
forcepoint
Same as
setNumberFlags
(numberFlags()
|ForcePoint
).
noshowbase
Same as
setNumberFlags
(numberFlags()
& ~ShowBase
).
noforcesign
Same as
setNumberFlags
(numberFlags()
& ~ForceSign
).
noforcepoint
Same as
setNumberFlags
(numberFlags()
& ~ForcePoint
).
uppercasebase
Same as
setNumberFlags
(numberFlags()
|UppercaseBase
).
uppercasedigits
Same as
setNumberFlags
(numberFlags()
|UppercaseDigits
).
lowercasebase
Same as
setNumberFlags
(numberFlags()
& ~UppercaseBase
).
lowercasedigits
Same as
setNumberFlags
(numberFlags()
& ~UppercaseDigits
).
fixed
Same as
setRealNumberNotation
(FixedNotation
).
scientific
Same as
setRealNumberNotation
(ScientificNotation
).
left
Same as
setFieldAlignment
(AlignLeft
).
right
Same as
setFieldAlignment
(AlignRight
).
center
Same as
setFieldAlignment
(AlignCenter
).
endl
Same as operator<<(’\n’) and
flush()
.
flush
Same as
flush()
.
reset
Same as
reset()
.
ws
Same as
skipWhiteSpace()
.
bom
Same as
setGenerateByteOrderMark
(true).
In addition, Qt provides three global manipulators that take a parameter: qSetFieldWidth()
, qSetPadChar()
, and qSetRealNumberPrecision()
.
See also
QDataStream
QIODevice
QFile
QBuffer
QTcpSocket
- class PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream#
PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream(array[, openMode=QIODeviceBase.OpenModeFlag.ReadWrite])
PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream(device)
- Parameters:
openMode –
OpenMode
device –
PySide6.QtCore.QIODevice
array –
PySide6.QtCore.QByteArray
Constructs a QTextStream
. Before you can use it for reading or writing, you must assign a device or a string.
See also
setDevice()
setString()
Constructs a QTextStream
that operates on array
, using openMode
to define the open mode. Internally, the array is wrapped by a QBuffer
.
Constructs a QTextStream
that operates on device
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.RealNumberNotation#
This enum specifies which notations to use for expressing float
and double
as strings.
Constant
Description
QTextStream.ScientificNotation
Scientific notation (
printf()
's%e
flag).QTextStream.FixedNotation
Fixed-point notation (
printf()
's%f
flag).QTextStream.SmartNotation
Scientific or fixed-point notation, depending on which makes most sense (
printf()
's%g
flag).See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.FieldAlignment#
This enum specifies how to align text in fields when the field is wider than the text that occupies it.
Constant
Description
QTextStream.AlignLeft
Pad on the right side of fields.
QTextStream.AlignRight
Pad on the left side of fields.
QTextStream.AlignCenter
Pad on both sides of field.
QTextStream.AlignAccountingStyle
Same as AlignRight, except that the sign of a number is flush left.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.Status#
This enum describes the current status of the text stream.
Constant
Description
QTextStream.Ok
The text stream is operating normally.
QTextStream.ReadPastEnd
The text stream has read past the end of the data in the underlying device.
QTextStream.ReadCorruptData
The text stream has read corrupt data.
QTextStream.WriteFailed
The text stream cannot write to the underlying device.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.NumberFlag#
(inherits enum.Flag
) This enum specifies various flags that can be set to affect the output of integers, float
s, and double
s.
Constant
Description
QTextStream.ShowBase
Show the base as a prefix if the base is 16 (“0x”), 8 (“0”), or 2 (“0b”).
QTextStream.ForcePoint
Always put the decimal separator in numbers, even if there are no decimals.
QTextStream.ForceSign
Always put the sign in numbers, even for positive numbers.
QTextStream.UppercaseBase
Use uppercase versions of base prefixes (“0X”, “0B”).
QTextStream.UppercaseDigits
Use uppercase letters for expressing digits 10 to 35 instead of lowercase.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.atEnd()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if there is no more data to be read from the QTextStream
; otherwise returns false
. This is similar to, but not the same as calling atEnd()
, as QTextStream
also takes into account its internal Unicode buffer.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.autoDetectUnicode()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if automatic Unicode detection is enabled, otherwise returns false
. Automatic Unicode detection is enabled by default.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.device()#
- Return type:
Returns the current device associated with the QTextStream
, or None
if no device has been assigned.
See also
Returns the encoding that is current assigned to the stream.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.fieldAlignment()#
- Return type:
Returns the current field alignment.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.fieldWidth()#
- Return type:
int
Returns the current field width.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.flush()#
Flushes any buffered data waiting to be written to the device.
If QTextStream
operates on a string, this function does nothing.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.generateByteOrderMark()#
- Return type:
bool
Returns true
if QTextStream
is set to generate the UTF BOM (Byte Order Mark) when using a UTF encoding; otherwise returns false
. UTF BOM generation is set to false by default.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.integerBase()#
- Return type:
int
Returns the current base of integers. 0 means that the base is detected when reading, or 10 (decimal) when generating numbers.
See also
setIntegerBase()
number()
numberFlags()
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.locale()#
- Return type:
Returns the locale for this stream. The default locale is C.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.numberFlags()#
- Return type:
NumberFlags
Returns the current number flags.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.__lshift__(m)#
- Parameters:
- Return type:
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.__lshift__(i)
- Parameters:
i – int
- Return type:
This is an overloaded function.
Writes the unsigned long i
to the stream.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.__lshift__(i)
- Parameters:
i –
long
- Return type:
This is an overloaded function.
Writes the signed long i
to the stream.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.__lshift__(f)
- Parameters:
f –
double
- Return type:
This is an overloaded function.
Writes the double f
to the stream.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.__lshift__(s)
- Parameters:
s – str
- Return type:
Writes the string string
to the stream, and returns a reference to the QTextStream
. The string is first encoded using the assigned encoding (the default is UTF-8) before it is written to the stream.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.__lshift__(arg__2)
- Parameters:
arg__2 –
PySide6.QtXml.QDomNode
- Return type:
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.__lshift__(array)
- Parameters:
array –
PySide6.QtCore.QByteArray
- Return type:
This is an overloaded function.
Writes array
to the stream. The contents of array
are converted with fromUtf8()
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.__lshift__(ch)
- Parameters:
ch –
char
- Return type:
This is an overloaded function.
Converts c
from ASCII to a QChar
, then writes it to the stream.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.__lshift__(s)
- Parameters:
s –
QStringView
- Return type:
This is an overloaded function.
Writes string
to the stream, and returns a reference to the QTextStream
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.__lshift__(ch)
- Parameters:
ch –
QChar
- Return type:
Writes the character c
to the stream, then returns a reference to the QTextStream
.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.__rshift__(array)#
- Parameters:
array –
PySide6.QtCore.QByteArray
- Return type:
This is an overloaded function.
Converts the word to UTF-8, then stores it in array
.
See also
toLatin1()
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.padChar()#
- Return type:
QChar
Returns the current pad character.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.pos()#
- Return type:
int
Returns the device position corresponding to the current position of the stream, or -1 if an error occurs (e.g., if there is no device or string, or if there’s a device error).
Because QTextStream
is buffered, this function may have to seek the device to reconstruct a valid device position. This operation can be expensive, so you may want to avoid calling this function in a tight loop.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.read(maxlen)#
- Parameters:
maxlen – int
- Return type:
str
Reads at most maxlen
characters from the stream, and returns the data read as a QString
.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.readAll()#
- Return type:
str
Reads the entire content of the stream, and returns it as a QString
. Avoid this function when working on large files, as it will consume a significant amount of memory.
Calling readLine()
is better if you do not know how much data is available.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.readLine([maxlen=0])#
- Parameters:
maxlen – int
- Return type:
str
Reads one line of text from the stream, and returns it as a QString
. The maximum allowed line length is set to maxlen
. If the stream contains lines longer than this, then the lines will be split after maxlen
characters and returned in parts.
If maxlen
is 0, the lines can be of any length.
The returned line has no trailing end-of-line characters (”\n” or “\r\n”), so calling trimmed()
can be unnecessary.
If the stream has read to the end of the file, readLine() will return a null QString
. For strings, or for devices that support it, you can explicitly test for the end of the stream using atEnd()
.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.readLineInto(line[, maxlen=0])#
- Parameters:
line – str
maxlen – int
- Return type:
bool
Reads one line of text from the stream into line
. If line
is None
, the read line is not stored.
The maximum allowed line length is set to maxlen
. If the stream contains lines longer than this, then the lines will be split after maxlen
characters and returned in parts.
If maxlen
is 0, the lines can be of any length.
The resulting line has no trailing end-of-line characters (”\n” or “\r\n”), so calling trimmed()
can be unnecessary.
If line
has sufficient capacity for the data that is about to be read, this function may not need to allocate new memory. Because of this, it can be faster than readLine()
.
Returns false
if the stream has read to the end of the file or an error has occurred; otherwise returns true
. The contents in line
before the call are discarded in any case.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.realNumberNotation()#
- Return type:
Returns the current real number notation.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.realNumberPrecision()#
- Return type:
int
Returns the current real number precision, or the number of fraction digits QTextStream
will write when generating real numbers ( FixedNotation
, ScientificNotation
), or the maximum number of significant digits ( SmartNotation
).
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.reset()#
Resets QTextStream
‘s formatting options, bringing it back to its original constructed state. The device, string and any buffered data is left untouched.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.resetStatus()#
Resets the status of the text stream.
See also
Status
status()
setStatus()
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.seek(pos)#
- Parameters:
pos – int
- Return type:
bool
Seeks to the position pos
in the device. Returns true
on success; otherwise returns false
.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.setAutoDetectUnicode(enabled)#
- Parameters:
enabled – bool
If enabled
is true, QTextStream
will attempt to detect Unicode encoding by peeking into the stream data to see if it can find the UTF-8, UTF-16, or UTF-32 Byte Order Mark (BOM). If this mark is found, QTextStream
will replace the current encoding with the UTF encoding.
This function can be used together with setEncoding()
. It is common to set the encoding to UTF-8, and then enable UTF-16 detection.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.setDevice(device)#
- Parameters:
device –
PySide6.QtCore.QIODevice
Sets the current device to device
. If a device has already been assigned, QTextStream
will call flush()
before the old device is replaced.
Note
This function resets locale to the default locale (‘C’) and encoding to the default encoding, UTF-8.
See also
device()
setString()
Sets the encoding for this stream to encoding
. The encoding is used for decoding any data that is read from the assigned device, and for encoding any data that is written. By default, Utf8
is used, and automatic unicode detection is enabled.
If QTextStream
operates on a string, this function does nothing.
Warning
If you call this function while the text stream is reading from an open sequential socket, the internal buffer may still contain text decoded using the old encoding.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.setFieldAlignment(alignment)#
- Parameters:
alignment –
FieldAlignment
Sets the field alignment to mode
. When used together with setFieldWidth()
, this function allows you to generate formatted output with text aligned to the left, to the right or center aligned.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.setFieldWidth(width)#
- Parameters:
width – int
Sets the current field width to width
. If width
is 0 (the default), the field width is equal to the length of the generated text.
Note
The field width applies to every element appended to this stream after this function has been called (e.g., it also pads endl). This behavior is different from similar classes in the STL, where the field width only applies to the next element.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.setGenerateByteOrderMark(generate)#
- Parameters:
generate – bool
If generate
is true and a UTF encoding is used, QTextStream
will insert the BOM (Byte Order Mark) before any data has been written to the device. If generate
is false, no BOM will be inserted. This function must be called before any data is written. Otherwise, it does nothing.
See also
generateByteOrderMark()
bom()
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.setIntegerBase(base)#
- Parameters:
base – int
Sets the base of integers to base
, both for reading and for generating numbers. base
can be either 2 (binary), 8 (octal), 10 (decimal) or 16 (hexadecimal). If base
is 0, QTextStream
will attempt to detect the base by inspecting the data on the stream. When generating numbers, QTextStream
assumes base is 10 unless the base has been set explicitly.
See also
integerBase()
number()
setNumberFlags()
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.setLocale(locale)#
- Parameters:
locale –
PySide6.QtCore.QLocale
Sets the locale for this stream to locale
. The specified locale is used for conversions between numbers and their string representations.
The default locale is C and it is a special case - the thousands group separator is not used for backward compatibility reasons.
See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.setNumberFlags(flags)#
- Parameters:
flags –
NumberFlags
Sets the current number flags to flags
. flags
is a set of flags from the NumberFlag
enum, and describes options for formatting generated code (e.g., whether or not to always write the base or sign of a number).
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.setPadChar(ch)#
- Parameters:
ch –
QChar
Warning
This section contains snippets that were automatically translated from C++ to Python and may contain errors.
Sets the pad character to ch
. The default value is the ASCII space character (’ ‘), or QChar
(0x20). This character is used to fill in the space in fields when generating text.
Example:
s = QString() out = QTextStream(s) out.setFieldWidth(10) out.setFieldAlignment(QTextStream.AlignCenter) out.setPadChar('-') out << "Qt" << "rocks!"
The string s
contains:
Qtrocksnot = Qtrocksnot - 1See also
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.setRealNumberNotation(notation)#
- Parameters:
notation –
RealNumberNotation
Sets the real number notation to notation
( SmartNotation
, FixedNotation
, ScientificNotation
). When reading and generating numbers, QTextStream
uses this value to detect the formatting of real numbers.
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.setRealNumberPrecision(precision)#
- Parameters:
precision – int
Sets the precision of real numbers to precision
. This value describes the number of fraction digits QTextStream
should write when generating real numbers ( FixedNotation
, ScientificNotation
), or the maximum number of significant digits ( SmartNotation
).
The precision cannot be a negative value. The default value is 6.
Sets the status of the text stream to the status
given.
Subsequent calls to setStatus() are ignored until resetStatus()
is called.
See also
Status
status()
resetStatus()
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.skipWhiteSpace()#
Reads and discards whitespace from the stream until either a non-space character is detected, or until atEnd()
returns true. This function is useful when reading a stream character by character.
Whitespace characters are all characters for which isSpace()
returns true
.
See also
operator>>()
Returns the status of the text stream.
See also
Status
setStatus()
resetStatus()
- PySide6.QtCore.QTextStream.string()#
- Return type:
str
Returns the current string assigned to the QTextStream
, or None
if no string has been assigned.
See also
setString()
device()