ReadAll Method
Reads an entire TextStream file and returns the resulting string.
Syntax
object.ReadAll( );
Remarks
The object is always the name of a TextStream object.
Remarks
For large files, using the ReadAll method wastes memory resources. Other techniques should be used to input a file, such as reading a file line by line.
The following example illustrates the use of the ReadAll method:
function ReadAllTextFile()
{
var ForReading = 1, ForWriting = 2;
var fso = new ActiveXObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject");
// Open the file for output.
var filename = "c:\\testfile.txt";
var f = fso.OpenTextFile(filename, ForWriting, true);
// Write to the file.
f.Write("Header");
f.Write("1234567890987654321");
f.Close();
// Open the file for input.
f = fso.OpenTextFile(filename, ForReading);
// Read from the file.
if (f.AtEndOfStream)
return ("");
else
return (f.ReadAll());
}
Function ReadAllTextFile
Const ForReading = 1, ForWriting = 2
Dim fso, MyFile, FileName
Set fso = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
' Open the file for output.
FileName = "c:\testfile.txt"
Set MyFile = fso.OpenTextFile(FileName, ForWriting, True)
' Write to the file.
MyFile.Write "Header"
MyFile.Write "1234567890987654321"
MyFile.Close
' Open the file for input.
Set MyFile = fso.OpenTextFile(FileName, ForReading)
' Read from the file.
If MyFile.AtEndOfStream Then
ReadAllTextFile = ""
Else
ReadAllTextFile = MyFile.ReadAll
End If
End Function
Applies To:
Change History
Date |
History |
Reason |
---|---|---|
September 2009 |
Modified the examples. |
Customer feedback. |