File size: Difference between revisions
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end Test_File_Size;</lang>
Note that reference to the root directory, if there is any, is [[OS]] specific.
=={{header|Aime}}==
<lang aime>o_(stat("input.txt", ST_SIZE), "\n");
o_("/Cygwin.ico".stat(ST_SIZE), "\n");</lang>
=={{header|ALGOL 68}}==
|
Revision as of 04:35, 20 May 2019
You are encouraged to solve this task according to the task description, using any language you may know.
Verify the size of a file called input.txt for a file in the current working directory, and another one in the file system root.
Ada
<lang ada>with Ada.Directories; use Ada.Directories; with Ada.Text_IO; use Ada.Text_IO;
procedure Test_File_Size is begin
Put_Line (File_Size'Image (Size ("input.txt")) & " bytes"); Put_Line (File_Size'Image (Size ("/input.txt")) & " bytes");
end Test_File_Size;</lang> Note that reference to the root directory, if there is any, is OS specific.
Aime
<lang aime>o_(stat("input.txt", ST_SIZE), "\n"); o_("/Cygwin.ico".stat(ST_SIZE), "\n");</lang>
ALGOL 68
There is no build in way to find the size of an arbitrary file, especially of the file is a special channel, e.g. a tape device.
Conceptually the procedure <lang algol68>PROC set = (REF FILE file, INT page, line, character)VOID: ~ </lang> could be used to do a binary search find the last page's page number. And if it is known that every page has the same number of lines, and every line has the same number of char[s], and the character set is not compressible, then the size could be quickly calculated. Otherwise every page, and every line would have to be tallied.
It is probably much easier to use some an operating system library. This library is not part of the standard ALGOL 68 language definition.
AutoHotkey
<lang AutoHotkey>FileGetSize, FileSize, input.txt ; Retrieve the size in bytes. MsgBox, Size of input.txt is %FileSize% bytes FileGetSize, FileSize, \input.txt, K ; Retrieve the size in Kbytes. MsgBox, Size of \input.txt is %FileSize% Kbytes</lang>
AWK
<lang awk>@load "filefuncs" function filesize(name ,fd) {
if ( stat(name, fd) == -1) return -1 # doesn't exist else return fd["size"]
} BEGIN {
print filesize("input.txt") print filesize("/input.txt")
}</lang>
Some awk's don't have direct access to the filesystem, but can execute system-commands like dir (DOS/Windows) and ls
<lang awk>BEGIN {
# Windows printf("input.txt\t%s\n", system2var("for %I in (input.txt) do @echo %~zI")) printf("\input.txt\t%s\n", system2var("for %I in (\input.txt) do @echo %~zI"))
# Non-Windows printf("input.txt\t%s\n", getline2var("stat --printf=\"%s\" input.txt")) printf("/input.txt\t%s\n", getline2var("stat --printf=\"%s\" /input.txt"))
}
- Windows system() method
function system2var(command ,tempfile, cmd, out, rec, data, i) {
tempfile = "C:\\TEMP\\TMP.TMP" cmd = command " > " tempfile system(cmd) close(cmd) while (getline rec < tempfile > 0) { if ( ++i == 1 ) data = rec else data = data "\n" rec } return(data)
}
- Non-windows getline method
function getline2var(command ,fish, scale, ship) {
command = command " 2>/dev/null" while ( (command | getline fish) > 0 ) { if ( ++scale == 1 ) ship = fish else ship = ship "\n" fish } close(command) return ship
}</lang>
See also UNIX_Shell]
Axe
<lang axe>If GetCalc("appvINPUT")→I
Disp {I-2}ʳ▶Dec,i
Else
Disp "NOT FOUND",i
End</lang>
BaCon
<lang freebasic>' file size ' Return the entire message, FILELEN returns a NUMBER FUNCTION printlen$(STRING name$)
IF FILEEXISTS(name$) THEN RETURN name$ & ": " & STR$(FILELEN(name$)) ELSE RETURN "file " & name$ & " not found" END IF
END FUNCTION
PRINT printlen$("input.txt") PRINT printlen$("/input.txt")</lang>
- Output:
prompt$ bacon filelen.bac Converting 'filelen.bac'... done, 12 lines were processed in 0.004 seconds. Compiling 'filelen.bac'... cc -c filelen.bac.c cc -o filelen filelen.bac.o -lbacon -lm Done, program 'filelen' ready. prompt$ ./filelen input.txt: 15 file /input.txt not found
Batch File
Outputs file size of the first parameter (you can drag and drop a file in aswell). <lang dos> @echo off if not exist "%~1" exit /b 1 & rem If file doesn't exist exit with error code of 1. for /f %%i in (%~1) do echo %~zi pause>nul </lang>
BBC BASIC
<lang bbcbasic> file% = OPENIN(@dir$+"input.txt")
IF file% THEN PRINT "File size = " ; EXT#file% CLOSE #file% ENDIF file% = OPENIN("\input.txt") IF file% THEN PRINT "File size = " ; EXT#file% CLOSE #file% ENDIF</lang>
Bracmat
This solution assumes that the file can be opened for reading. The fil
function is the Bracmat interface to the underlying C functions fopen, fclose, fseek, ftell, fread, fgetc, fwrite, fputc
and feof
. More than one file can be opened at the same time. Focus is shifted from one open file to another by mentioning the file name as the first argument.
<lang bracmat>(getFileSize=
size
. fil$(!arg,rb) {read in binary mode}
& fil$(,END) {seek to end of file} & fil$(,TEL):?size {tell where we are} & fil$(,SET,-1) {seeking to an impossible position closes the file, and fails} | !size {return the size}
);
getFileSize$"valid.bra" 113622
getFileSize$"c:\\boot.ini" 211 </lang>
C
<lang c>#include <stdlib.h>
- include <stdio.h>
long getFileSize(const char *filename) {
long result; FILE *fh = fopen(filename, "rb"); fseek(fh, 0, SEEK_END); result = ftell(fh); fclose(fh); return result;
}
int main(void) {
printf("%ld\n", getFileSize("input.txt")); printf("%ld\n", getFileSize("/input.txt")); return 0;
}</lang>
<lang c>#include <stdlib.h>
- include <stdio.h>
- include <sys/stat.h>
int main(void) {
struct stat foo; stat("input.txt", &foo); printf("%ld\n", foo.st_size); stat("/input.txt", &foo); printf("%ld\n", foo.st_size); return 0;
}</lang>
C++
<lang cpp>#include <iostream>
- include <fstream>
std::ios::off_type getFileSize(const char *filename) {
std::ifstream f(filename); std::ios::pos_type begin = f.tellg(); f.seekg(0, std::ios::end); std::ios::pos_type end = f.tellg(); return end - begin;
}
int main() {
std::cout << getFileSize("input.txt") << std::endl; std::cout << getFileSize("/input.txt") << std::endl; return 0;
}</lang>
optimized <lang cpp>#include <iostream>
- include <fstream>
int main() { std::cout << std::ifstream("input.txt", std::ios::binary | std::ios::ate).tellg() << "\n" << std::ifstream("/input.txt", std::ios::binary | std::ios::ate).tellg() << "\n"; }</lang>
C#
<lang csharp>using System; using System.IO;
class Program {
static void Main(string[] args) { Console.WriteLine(new FileInfo("/input.txt").Length); Console.WriteLine(new FileInfo("input.txt").Length); }
} </lang>
Clean
There is not function to get the file size, therefore we seek to the end and query the file pointer position.
<lang clean>import StdEnv
fileSize fileName world
# (ok, file, world) = fopen fileName FReadData world | not ok = abort "Cannot open file" # (ok, file) = fseek file 0 FSeekEnd | not ok = abort "Cannot seek file" # (size, file) = fposition file (_, world) = fclose file world = (size, world)
Start world = fileSize "input.txt" world</lang>
Clojure
<lang clojure>(require '[clojure.java.io :as io]) (defn show-size [filename]
(println filename "size:" (.length (io/file filename))))
(show-size "input.txt") (show-size "/input.txt")</lang>
ColdFusion
<lang ColdFusion><cfscript>
localFile = getFileInfo(expandpath("input.txt")); rootFile = getFileInfo("/input.txt");
</cfscript>
<cfoutput>
Size of input.txt is #localFile.size# bytes. Size of /input.txt is #rootFile.size# bytes.
</cfoutput></lang>
Common Lisp
<lang lisp>(with-open-file (stream (make-pathname :name "input.txt")
:direction :input :if-does-not-exist nil) (print (if stream (file-length stream) 0)))
(with-open-file (stream (make-pathname :directory '(:absolute "") :name "input.txt")
:direction :input :if-does-not-exist nil) (print (if stream (file-length stream) 0)))</lang>
(osicat-posix:stat-size (osicat-posix:stat #P"input.txt"))
D
<lang d>import std.file, std.stdio, std.path, std.file, std.stream,
std.mmfile;
void main() {
immutable fileName = "file_size.exe";
try { writefln("File '%s' has size:", fileName);
writefln("%10d bytes by std.file.getSize (function)", std.file.getSize(fileName));
writefln("%10d bytes by std.stream (class)", new std.stream.File(fileName).size);
// mmfile can treat the file as an array in memory. writefln("%10d bytes by std.mmfile (class)", new std.mmfile.MmFile(fileName).length); } catch (Exception e) { e.msg.writefln; }
}</lang>
- Output:
File 'file_size.exe' has size: 1066164 bytes by std.file.getSize (function) 1066164 bytes by std.stream (class) 1066164 bytes by std.mmfile (class)
Delphi
<lang Delphi>program SizeOfFile;
{$APPTYPE CONSOLE}
uses SysUtils;
function CheckFileSize(const aFilename: string): Integer; var
lFile: file of Byte;
begin
AssignFile(lFile, aFilename); FileMode := 0; {Access file in read only mode} Reset(lFile); Result := FileSize(lFile); CloseFile(lFile);
end;
begin
Writeln('input.txt ', CheckFileSize('input.txt')); Writeln('\input.txt ', CheckFileSize('\input.txt'));
end.</lang>
E
<lang e>for file in [<file:input.txt>, <file:///input.txt>] {
println(`The size of $file is ${file.length()} bytes.`)
}</lang>
Eiffel
<lang eiffel> class
APPLICATION
create
make
feature {NONE} -- Initialization
make -- Run application. do create input_file.make_open_read ("input.txt") print(input_file.count) print("%N") input_file.close create environment input_file.make_open_read(environment.root_directory_name + "input.txt") print(input_file.count) input_file.close end
feature -- Access
input_file: PLAIN_TEXT_FILE environment:EXECUTION_ENVIRONMENT
end </lang>
Elena
ELENA 4.x : <lang elena>import system'io; import extensions;
public program() {
console.printLine(File.assign("input.txt").Length); console.printLine(File.assign("\input.txt").Length)
}</lang>
Elixir
<lang elixir>IO.puts File.stat!("input.txt").size IO.puts File.stat!("/input.txt").size</lang>
Emacs Lisp
This shows nil
if no such file since
file-attributes
returns nil
in that case.
<lang Lisp>(message "sizes are %s and %s"
(nth 7 (file-attributes "input.txt")) (nth 7 (file-attributes "/input.txt")))</lang>
Erlang
<lang erlang>-module(file_size). -export([file_size/0]).
-include_lib("kernel/include/file.hrl").
file_size() ->
print_file_size("input.txt"), print_file_size("/input.txt").
print_file_size(Filename) ->
case file:read_file_info(Filename) of
{ok, FileInfo} -> io:format("~s ~p~n", [Filename, FileInfo#file_info.size]); {error, _} -> io:format("~s could not be opened~n",[Filename])
end.
</lang>
Euphoria
<lang euphoria>include file.e
function file_size(sequence file_name)
object x x = dir(file_name) if sequence(x) and length(x) = 1 then return x[1][D_SIZE] else return -1 -- the file does not exist end if
end function
procedure test(sequence file_name)
integer size size = file_size(file_name) if size < 0 then printf(1,"%s file does not exist.\n",{file_name}) else printf(1,"%s size is %d.\n",{file_name,size}) end if
end procedure
test("input.txt") -- in the current working directory test("/input.txt") -- in the file system root</lang>
Factor
<lang factor>"input.txt" file-info size>> .
1321
"file-does-not-exist.txt" file-info size>>
"Unix system call ``stat failed:"...</lang>
FBSL
FileLen returns -1 if the file is not found. FileLen will also accept a file handle and give the file length of the open file. <lang qbasic>#APPTYPE CONSOLE
print FileLen("sync.log") print FileLen("\sync.log") PAUSE </lang>
Forth
<lang forth>: .filesize ( addr len -- ) 2dup type ." is "
r/o open-file throw dup file-size throw <# #s #> type ." bytes long." cr close-file throw ;
s" input.txt" .filesize
s" /input.txt" .filesize</lang>
Fortran
Since Fortran 95 the size of standard external files may be determined simply by using INQUIRE(SIZE=...). The following previous example pertains to FORTRAN 77 and is now superceded. <lang Fortran>
use :: iso_fortran_env, only : FILE_STORAGE_SIZE implicit none character(len=*),parameter :: filename(*)=[character(len=256) :: 'input.txt', '/input.txt'] integer :: file_size, i do i=1,size(filename) INQUIRE(FILE=filename(i), SIZE=file_size) ! return -1 if cannot determine file size write(*,*)'size of file '//trim(filename(i))//' is ',file_size * FILE_STORAGE_SIZE /8,' bytes' enddo end </lang>
The original example, now obsolete ...
Alas, although there is a statement INQUIRE(FILE="Input.txt",EXIST = ISTHERE, RECL = RL, etc.)
whereby a logical variable ISTHERE has a value (output: assigned left-to-right) according to whether a named file (input: assignment right-to-left) exists or not, and the parameter RECL returns the maximum allowed record length for the file, there is no parameter that reports how many records there are in the file so that the file size remains unknowable. Further, the value returned by RECL is not necessarily related to the file itself, but is likely to be a standard value such as 132, a default used when deciding on the line wrap length with free-format output as in WRITE (6,*) stuff
but not necessarily being a limit on the length of a line written or read.
Further, in the ASCII world, text files are often implemented as variable-length records with special characters inline as record boundaries, usually one of CR, CRLF, LFCR, or LF. Without knowing which is in use, the storage taken up by them would be unknown. Other file systems may offer different types of disc files with fixed-size records or variable length records with a record length counter, but this is not standard across all computers.
In other words, Fortran does not specify a linkage to the filesystem whereby these details could be revealed, and not all filesystems maintain them anyway.
But if one wrote Fortran on a B6700 system, its F77 compiler offered additional attributes that could be returned via an INQUIRE statement: MAXRECSIZE really was the length of the longest record in the disc file (whether fixed record lengths or variable record lengths), BLOCKSIZE reported the number of records per block of disc space, AREASIZE the size of a disc space allocation area, and AREAS their number, while KIND reveals the code number of the type of file (not via a .txt suffix or whatever). Armed with these values, the file size could be determined in bits, bytes, words (six characters/word), records, blocks and areas.
These facilities were not carried forward into standardised Fortran 90, etc. So, one is stuck with devising a routine that reads all the records of a disc file, counting their length. This is straightforward, but tedious, as in the following fragment:<lang Fortran> 20 READ (INF,21, END = 30) L !R E A D A R E C O R D - but only its length.
21 FORMAT(Q) !This obviously indicates the record's length. NRECS = NRECS + 1 !CALL LONGCOUNT(NRECS,1) !C O U N T A R E C O R D. NNBYTES = NNBYTES + L !CALL LONGCOUNT(NNBYTES,L) !Not counting any CRLF (or whatever) gibberish. IF (L.LT.RMIN) THEN !Righto, now for the record lengths. RMIN = L !This one is shorter. RMINR = NRECS !Where it's at. ELSE IF (L.GT.RMAX) THEN !Perhaps instead it is longer? RMAX = L !Longer. RMAXR = NRECS !Where it's at. END IF !So much for the lengths. GO TO 20 !All I wanted to know...</lang>
The LONGCOUNT routine uses two 32-bit integers (the first parameter being a two-element array) to deliver a much larger capacity, given modern file size opportunities, but this is unnecessary if INTEGER*8 variables are available. The count will not include any contribution from record splitters such as CR, etc. A file more properly thought of as containing binary data (say, integer or floating-point values) will by chance have a CR or LF bit pattern here and there, and they will be taken as marking record splits when reading a file as being FORMATTED, which is the default setting.
FreeBASIC
<lang freebasic>' FB 1.05.0 Win64
- include "file.bi"
Print FileLen("input.txt"), FileLen(Environ("SystemRoot") + "\input.txt") Sleep</lang>
F#
<lang fsharp>open NUnit.Framework open FsUnit
[<Test>] let ``Validate that the size of the two files is the same`` () =
let local = System.IO.FileInfo(__SOURCE_DIRECTORY__ + "\input.txt") let root = System.IO.FileInfo(System.IO.Directory.GetDirectoryRoot(__SOURCE_DIRECTORY__) + "input.txt") local.Length = root.Length |> should be True</lang>
Gambas
<lang gambas>Public Sub Main() Dim stInfo As Stat = Stat(User.home &/ "input.txt") Dim stInfo1 As Stat = Stat("/input.txt")
Print User.Home &/ "input.txt = " & stInfo.Size & " bytes" Print "/input.txt = " & stInfo1.Size & " bytes"
End</lang> Output:
/home/charlie/input.txt = 121 bytes /input.txt = 32 bytes
Go
<lang go>package main
import "fmt" import "os"
func printFileSize(f string) {
if stat, err := os.Stat(f); err != nil { fmt.Println(err) } else { fmt.Println(stat.Size()) }
}
func main() {
printFileSize("input.txt") printFileSize("/input.txt")
}</lang>
Groovy
<lang groovy>println new File('index.txt').length(); println new File('/index.txt').length();</lang>
Haskell
<lang haskell>import System.IO
printFileSize filename = withFile filename ReadMode hFileSize >>= print
main = mapM_ printFileSize ["input.txt", "/input.txt"]</lang> or <lang haskell>import System.Posix.File
printFileSize filename = do stat <- getFileStatus filename
print (fileSize stat)
main = mapM_ printFileSize ["input.txt", "/input.txt"]</lang>
HicEst
<lang hicest>READ(FILE="input.txt", LENgth=bytes) ! bytes = -1 if not existent READ(FILE="C:\input.txt", LENgth=bytes) ! bytes = -1 if not existent </lang>
Icon and Unicon
Icon doesn't support 'stat'; however, information can be obtained by use of the system function to access command line. <lang Unicon>every dir := !["./","/"] do {
write("Size of ",f := dir || "input.txt"," = ",stat(f).size) |stop("failure for to stat ",f) }</lang>
Note: Icon and Unicon accept both / and \ for directory separators.
J
<lang J>require 'files' fsize 'input.txt';'/input.txt'</lang>
Java
<lang java>import java.io.File;
public class FileSize {
public static void main ( String[] args ) { System.out.println("input.txt : " + new File("input.txt").length() + " bytes"); System.out.println("/input.txt : " + new File("/input.txt").length() + " bytes"); }
} </lang>
JavaScript
<lang javascript>var fso = new ActiveXObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject"); fso.GetFile('input.txt').Size; fso.GetFile('c:/input.txt').Size;</lang>
The following works in all browsers, including IE10. <lang javascript>var file = document.getElementById("fileInput").files.item(0); //a file input element if (file) { var reader = new FileReader(); reader.readAsText(file, "UTF-8"); reader.onload = loadedFile; reader.onerror = errorHandler; } function loadedFile(event) { var fileString = event.target.result; alert(fileString.length); } function errorHandler(event) { alert(event); }</lang>
jq
<lang sh>jq -Rs length input.txt
jq -Rs length /input.txt</lang>
The -R option causes the file to be read as text, and the -s option causes it to be read as a single string.
Julia
<lang julia>println(filesize("input.txt")) println(filesize("/input.txt"))</lang>
K
<lang K>_size "input.txt" _size "/input.txt"</lang>
Kotlin
<lang scala>// version 1.0.6
import java.io.File
fun main(args: Array<String>) {
val paths = arrayOf("input.txt", "c:\\input.txt") for (path in paths) println("Length of $path is ${File(path).length()} bytes")
}</lang>
Lasso
<lang Lasso>// local to current directory local(f = file('input.txt')) handle => { #f->close }
- f->size
// file at file system root local(f = file('//input.txt')) handle => { #f->close }
- f->size
</lang>
Liberty BASIC
<lang lb>'input.txt in current directory OPEN DefaultDir$ + "/input.txt" FOR input AS #m PRINT "File size: "; lof(#m) CLOSE #m
'input.txt in root OPEN "c:/input.txt" FOR input AS #m PRINT "File size: "; lof(#m) CLOSE #m</lang>
Lingo
<lang lingo>---------------------------------------- -- Returns file size -- @param {string} filename -- @return {integer}
on getFileSize (filename)
fp = xtra("fileIO").new() fp.openFile(filename, 1) if fp.status() then return 0 len = fp.getLength() fp.closeFile() return len
end</lang>
LiveCode
<lang LiveCode>// root folder set the defaultfolder to "/" repeat for each line fline in (the detailed files)
if item 1 of fline is "input.txt" then put item 2 of fline --bytes exit repeat end if
end repeat
// current working dir of stack put the effective filename of this stack into tPath set the itemDelimiter to slash delete last item of tPath set the defaultfolder to tPath repeat for each line fline in (the detailed files)
if item 1 of fline is "input.txt" then put item 2 of fline exit repeat end if
end repeat</lang>
Lua
<lang Lua>function GetFileSize( filename )
local fp = io.open( filename ) if fp == nil then return nil end local filesize = fp:seek( "end" ) fp:close() return filesize
end</lang>
Maple
<lang Maple>FileTools:-Size( "input.txt" )</lang> <lang Maple>FileTools:-Size( "/input.txt" )</lang>
Mathematica / Wolfram Language
<lang Mathematica> FileByteCount["input.txt"] FileByteCount[FileNameJoin[{$RootDirectory, "input.txt"}]]</lang>
MATLAB / Octave
<lang matlab>d1 = dir('input.txt'); d2 = dir('/input.txt'); fprintf('Size of input.txt is %d bytes\n', d1.bytes) fprintf('Size of /input.txt is %d bytes\n', d2.bytes)</lang>
MAXScript
<lang maxscript>-- Returns filesize in bytes or 0 if the file is missing getFileSize "index.txt" getFileSize "\index.txt"</lang>
Mirah
<lang mirah>import java.io.File
puts File.new('file-size.mirah').length() puts File.new("./#{File.separator}file-size.mirah").length()</lang>
mIRC Scripting Language
<lang mirc>echo -ag $file(input.txt).size bytes echo -ag $file(C:\input.txt).size bytes</lang>
Modula-3
<lang modula3>MODULE FSize EXPORTS Main;
IMPORT IO, Fmt, FS, File, OSError;
VAR fstat: File.Status;
BEGIN
TRY fstat := FS.Status("input.txt"); IO.Put("Size of input.txt: " & Fmt.LongInt(fstat.size) & "\n"); fstat := FS.Status("/input.txt"); IO.Put("Size of /input.txt: " & Fmt.LongInt(fstat.size) & "\n"); EXCEPT | OSError.E => IO.Put("ERROR: Could not get file status.\n"); END;
END FSize.</lang>
NetRexx
<lang NetRexx>/* NetRexx */ options replace format comments java symbols binary
runSample(arg) return
-- . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . method fileSize(fn) public static returns double
ff = File(fn) fSize = ff.length() return fSize
-- ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ method runSample(arg) private static
parse arg files if files = then files = 'input.txt F docs D /input.txt F /docs D' loop while files.length > 0 parse files fn ft files select case(ft.upper()) when 'F' then do ft = 'File' end when 'D' then do ft = 'Directory' end otherwise do ft = 'File' end end sz = fileSize(fn) say ft 'fn' sz 'bytes.' end
return</lang>
- Output:
J:\>nrc fsz java -cp "c:\netRexx\lib\NetRexxR.jar;c:\netRexx\lib\NetRexxC.jar;.;C:\Program Files\BSF4ooRexx\bsf4ooRexx-v452-20150825-bin.jar;;c:\netrexx\lib\NetRexxF.jar;." -Dnrx.compiler=ecj org.netrexx.process.NetRexxC fsz NetRexx portable processor 3.04 GA build 4-20150630-1657 Copyright (c) RexxLA, 2011,2015. All rights reserved. Parts Copyright (c) IBM Corporation, 1995,2008. Program fsz.nrx function fileSize(Rexx) function runSample(Rexx) Compilation of 'fsz.nrx' successful J:\>java fsz test.txt File 'test.txt' 8 bytes.
NewLISP
<lang NewLISP>(println (first (file-info "input.txt"))) (println (first (file-info "/input.txt")))</lang>
Nim
<lang nim>import os echo getFileSize "input.txt" echo getFileSize "/input.txt"</lang>
Objective-C
<lang objc>NSFileManager *fm = [NSFileManager defaultManager];
// Pre-OS X 10.5 NSLog(@"%llu", [[fm fileAttributesAtPath:@"input.txt" traverseLink:YES] fileSize]);
// OS X 10.5+ NSLog(@"%llu", [[fm attributesOfItemAtPath:@"input.txt" error:NULL] fileSize]);</lang>
Objeck
<lang objeck> use IO; ... File("input.txt")->Size()->PrintLine(); File("c:\input.txt")->Size()->PrintLine(); </lang>
OCaml
<lang ocaml>let printFileSize filename =
let ic = open_in filename in Printf.printf "%d\n" (in_channel_length ic); close_in ic ;;
printFileSize "input.txt" ;; printFileSize "/input.txt" ;;</lang>
For files greater than Pervasives.max_int, one can use the module Pervasives.LargeFile: <lang ocaml>let printLargeFileSize filename =
let ic = open_in filename in Printf.printf "%Ld\n" (LargeFile.in_channel_length ic); close_in ic ;;</lang>
Alternatively: <lang ocaml>#load "unix.cma" ;; open Unix ;; Printf.printf "%d\n" (stat "input.txt").st_size ;; Printf.printf "%d\n" (stat "/input.txt").st_size ;;</lang>
The module Unix has also a LargeFile sub-module.
Oforth
<lang Oforth>File new("input.txt") size println File new("/input.txt") size println</lang>
ooRexx
<lang oorexx>Parse Version v Say v fid='test.txt' x=sysfiletree(fid,a.) Say a.0 Say a.1 Say left(copies('123456789.',10),length(a.1)) Parse Var a.1 20 size . Say 'file size:' size s=charin(fid,,1000) Say length(s) Say 'file' fid 'type' fid</lang>
- Output:
J:\>rexx sft REXX-ooRexx_4.2.0(MT)_64-bit 6.04 22 Feb 2014 1 7/26/16 3:28p 8 A---- J:\test.txt 123456789.123456789.123456789.123456789.12345678 file size: 8 8 file test.txt 12 34
Oz
<lang oz>declare
[Path] = {Module.link ['x-oz://system/os/Path.ozf']}
in
{Show {Path.size "input.txt"}} {Show {Path.size "/input.txt"}}</lang>
Pascal
See Delphi
Perl
<lang perl>my $size1 = -s 'input.txt'; my $size2 = -s '/input.txt';</lang>
Or, to be 100% cross-platform: <lang perl>use File::Spec::Functions qw(catfile rootdir); my $size1 = -s 'input.txt'; my $size2 = -s catfile rootdir, 'input.txt';</lang>
Alternative way to get the size: <lang perl>my $size1 = (stat 'input.txt')[7]; # builtin stat() returns an array with file size at index 7 my $size2 = (stat '/input.txt')[7];</lang>
Perl 6
<lang perl6>say 'input.txt'.IO.s; say '/input.txt'.IO.s;</lang>
Cross-platform version of the second one: <lang perl6>say $*SPEC.rootdir.IO.child("input.txt").s;</lang>
Phix
<lang Phix>function file_size(sequence file_name) object d = dir(file_name)
if atom(d) or length(d)!=1 then return -1 end if return d[1][D_SIZE]
end function
procedure test(sequence file_name) integer size = file_size(file_name)
if size<0 then printf(1,"%s file does not exist.\n",{file_name}) else printf(1,"%s size is %d.\n",{file_name,size}) end if
end procedure
test("input.txt") -- in the current working directory test("/input.txt") -- in the file system root</lang>
PHP
<lang php><?php echo filesize('input.txt'), "\n"; echo filesize('/input.txt'), "\n"; ?></lang>
PicoLisp
<lang PicoLisp>(println (car (info "input.txt"))) (println (car (info "/input.txt")))</lang>
Pike
<lang pike>import Stdio;
int main(){
write(file_size("input.txt") + "\n"); write(file_size("/input.txt") + "\n");
}</lang>
PL/I
<lang PL/I> /* To obtain file size of files in root as well as from current directory. */
test: proc options (main);
declare ch character (1); declare i fixed binary (31); declare in1 file record;
/* Open a file in the root directory. */ open file (in1) title ('//asd.log,type(fixed),recsize(1)'); on endfile (in1) go to next1; do i = 0 by 1; read file (in1) into (ch); end;
next1:
put skip list ('file size in root directory =' || trim(i)); close file (in1);
/* Open a file in the current dorectory. */ open file (in1) title ('/asd.txt,type(fixed),recsize(1)'); on endfile (in1) go to next2; do i = 0 by 1; read file (in1) into (ch); end;
next2:
put skip list ('local file size=' || trim(i));
end test; </lang>
I used differently-named files to prove that local and root directory files were accessed. This program ran with Windows PL/I.
Pop11
<lang pop11>;;; prints file size in bytes sysfilesize('input.txt') => sysfilesize('/input.txt') =></lang>
PostScript
status
returns status information about a file if given a file name. This includes the size in pages (implementation-dependent), the size in bytes, creation and modification time and a final true
. The values not needed here are simply pop
ed off the stack.
<lang postscript>(input.txt ) print
(input.txt) status pop pop pop = pop
(/input.txt ) print
(/input.txt) status pop pop pop = pop</lang>
PowerShell
<lang powershell>Get-ChildItem input.txt | Select-Object Name,Length Get-ChildItem \input.txt | Select-Object Name,Length</lang>
PureBasic
<lang purebasic>Debug FileSize("input.txt") Debug FileSize("/input.txt")</lang>
Python
<lang python>import os
size = os.path.getsize('input.txt') size = os.path.getsize('/input.txt')</lang>
R
R has a function file.info() in the base package that performs this function. Note that regardless of the OS, R uses forward slashes for the directories.
<lang R>sizeinwd <- file.info('input.txt')"size" sizeinroot <- file.info('/input.txt')"size"</lang>
Racket
<lang Racket>#lang racket (file-size "input.txt") (file-size "/input.txt")</lang>
RapidQ
File I/O is one of the things where RapidQ differs from standard Basic. RapidQ uses file streams.
Method 1: display file size using file streams
<lang rapidq>$INCLUDE "rapidq.inc"
DIM file AS QFileStream
FUNCTION fileSize(name$) AS Integer
file.Open(name$, fmOpenRead) Result = file.Size file.Close
END FUNCTION
PRINT "Size of input.txt is "; fileSize("input.txt") PRINT "Size of \input.txt is "; fileSize("\input.txt")</lang>
Method 2: using DIR$
<lang rapidq>FileName$ = DIR$("input.txt", 0) PRINT "Size of input.txt is "; FileRec.Size FileName$ = DIR$("\input.txt", 0) PRINT "Size of \input.txt is "; FileRec.Size</lang>
Raven
<lang raven>'input.txt' status.size '/input.txt' status.size</lang>
REBOL
<lang REBOL>size? %info.txt size? %/info.txt size? ftp://username:password@ftp.site.com/info.txt size? http://rosettacode.org</lang>
Red
<lang Red>>> size? %input.txt == 39244 >> size? %/c/input.txt == 39244</lang>
Retro
The simple way is to open and read the size. This may crash if the file does not exist.
<lang Retro>with files' "input.txt" :R open &size sip close drop putn "/input.txt" :R open &size sip close drop putn</lang>
For added stability, check that the returned file handle is not zero:
<lang Retro>with files' "input.txt" :R open over 0 <> [ &size sip close drop ] ifTrue</lang>
Or, if you need to do this more often, setup a function that'll also display an error message if the file does not exist:
<lang Retro>with files'
- getFileSize ( $-n )
:R open 0 over = [ "File does Not Exist\n" puts ] [ &size sip close drop ] if ;
"input.txt" getFileSize putn "/input.txt" getFileSize putn</lang>
REXX
MS DOS version 1
This REXX example was executed on a Windows/XP system (in a DOS window).
Note that some operating systems don't have a concept of a current directory or a file system root.
<lang rexx>/*REXX program verifies a file's size (by reading all the lines) in current dir & root.*/
parse arg iFID . /*allow the user specify the file ID. */
if iFID== | iFID=="," then iFID='FILESIZ.DAT' /*Not specified? Then use the default.*/
say 'size of' iFID "=" fileSize(iFID) 'bytes' /*the current directory.*/
say 'size of \..\'iFID "=" fileSize('\..\'iFID) 'bytes' /* " root " */
exit /*stick a fork in it, we're all done. */
/*──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────*/
fileSize: parse arg f; $=0; do while lines(f)\==0
$=$+length(charin(f,,1e6)) end /*while*/ return $</lang>
output when using the default input:
size of FILESIZ.DAT = 2 bytes size of \..\FILESIZ.DAT = 5 bytes
MS DOS version 2
<lang rexx>/*REXX pgm to verify a file's size */ parse arg iFID . /*let user specify the file ID. */ if iFID== then iFID="FILESIZ.DAT" /*Not specified? Then use default*/ say 'size of' iFID':' Say chars(ifid) '(CR LF included)' Call lineout ifid /* close the file */ say filesize(ifid) '(net data)' Call lineout ifid exit
filesize: parse arg f;
sz=0; Do while lines(f)\==0 sz=sz+length(linein(f)) End return sz</lang>
- Output:
size of FILESIZ.DAT: 4 (CR LF included) 2 (net data)
CMS version
Note that CMS hasn't a concept of a root.
Also note that the CMS system doesn't normally support the use of periods (.); it uses blanks instead.
<lang rexx>/*REXX program verifies a file's size (by reading all the lines) on the default mDisk.*/
parse arg iFID . /*allow the user specify the file ID. */
if iFID== | iFID=="," then iFID='FILESIZ DAT' /*Not specified? Then use the default.*/
say 'size of' iFID "=" filesize(iFID) 'bytes' /*on the default mDisk.*/
exit /*stick a fork in it, we're all done. */
/*──────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────*/
filesize: parse arg f; $=0; do while lines(f)\==0
$=$+length(linein(f)) end /*while*/ return $</lang>
Ring
<lang ring>See len(read('input.txt')) + nl see len(read('/input.txt')) + nl</lang>
Ruby
<lang ruby>size = File.size('input.txt') size = File.size('/input.txt')</lang>
Run BASIC
<lang runbasic>print fileSize(DefaultDir$,"input.txt") ' current default directory print fileSize("","input.txt") ' root directory
function fileSize(dir$,file$) open dir$;"\";file$ FOR input as #f fileSize = lof(#f) ' Length Of File close #f end function</lang>
Rust
<lang rust>use std::{env, fs, process}; use std::io::{self, Write}; use std::fmt::Display;
fn main() {
let file_name = env::args().nth(1).unwrap_or_else(|| exit_err("No file name supplied", 1)); let metadata = fs::metadata(file_name).unwrap_or_else(|e| exit_err(e, 2));
println!("Size of file.txt is {} bytes", metadata.len());
}
- [inline]
fn exit_err<T: Display>(msg: T, code: i32) -> ! {
writeln!(&mut io::stderr(), "Error: {}", msg).expect("Could not write to stdout"); process::exit(code)
}
}</lang>
Scala
<lang Scala>import java.io.File
object FileSize extends App {
val name = "pg1661.txt"
println(s"$name : ${new File(name).length()} bytes") println(s"/$name : ${new File(s"${File.separator}$name").length()} bytes")
}</lang>
Scheme
<lang scheme> (define (file-size filename)
(call-with-input-file filename (lambda (port) (let loop ((c (read-char port)) (count 0)) (if (eof-object? c) count (loop (read-char port) (+ 1 count)))))))
(file-size "input.txt") (file-size "/input.txt") </lang>
Seed7
<lang seed7>$ include "seed7_05.s7i";
const proc: main is func
begin writeln(fileSize("input.txt")); writeln(fileSize("/input.txt")); end func;</lang>
Sidef
<lang ruby>say (Dir.cwd + %f'input.txt' -> size); say (Dir.root + %f'input.txt' -> size);</lang>
Slate
<lang slate>(File newNamed: 'input.txt') fileInfo fileSize. (File newNamed: '/input.txt') fileInfo fileSize.</lang>
Smalltalk
<lang smalltalk>(File name: 'input.txt') size printNl. (File name: '/input.txt') size printNl.</lang>
<lang smalltalk>'input.txt' asFilename fileSize '/input.txt' asFilename fileSize</lang>
Standard ML
<lang sml>val size = OS.FileSys.fileSize "input.txt" ;; val size = OS.FileSys.fileSize "/input.txt" ;</lang>
Stata
To get the size in byte of an arbitrary file, use file seek. Just replace input.txt with \input.txt if the file resides in the root directory of the current disk.
<lang stata>file open f using input.txt, read binary file seek f eof file seek f query display r(loc) file close f</lang>
However, what is usually interesting is the size of a datatset. Use describe, either on the currently loaded dataset, or on a dataset on disk. The describe command will print the file size, but it's possible to use stored results as well.
<lang stata>describe using test.dta display r(N)*r(width)</lang>
Tcl
<lang tcl>file size input.txt file size /input.txt</lang>
Toka
A trivial method follows:
<lang toka>" input.txt" "R" file.open dup file.size . file.close " /input.txt" "R" file.open dup file.size . file.close</lang>
A better method would be to define a new function that actually checks whether the file exists:
<lang toka>[ "R" file.open
dup 0 <> [ dup file.size . file.close ] ifTrue drop
] is display-size
" input.txt" display-size " /input.txt" display-size</lang>
TorqueScript
--Ipquarx June 19th, 10:00 AM
Since TorqueScript cannot set the current working directory, the second part of the task cannot be completed.
TGE Version (Works with all versions containing the basic file i/o):
<lang Torque>%File = new FileObject(); %File.openForRead("input.txt");
while(!%File.isEOF()) { %Length += strLen(%File.readLine()); }
%File.close();
%File.delete();</lang>
T3D Version (Only works with T3D):
<lang Torque>fileSize("input.txt");</lang>
TUSCRIPT
<lang tuscript> $$ MODE TUSCRIPT -- size of file input.txt file="input.txt" ERROR/STOP OPEN (file,READ,-std-) file_size=BYTES ("input.txt") ERROR/STOP CLOSE (file)
-- size of file x:/input.txt ERROR/STOP OPEN (file,READ,x) file_size=BYTES (file) ERROR/STOP CLOSE (file) </lang>
UNIX Shell
An interactive user would run ls -l input.txt /input.txt to see the file sizes. This task is more difficult for a shell script, that must extract each size from command output.
Using ls
ls most likely gets the length from the file's inode.
<lang bash>size1=$(ls -l input.txt | tr -s ' ' | cut -d ' ' -f 5) size2=$(ls -l /input.txt | tr -s ' ' | cut -d ' ' -f 5)</lang>
ls -l reports the size in 5th field, with spaces between fields. tr squeezes spaces (because cut needs one single space between fields), and cut extracts 5th field.
<lang bash> echo "# ls:" ls -la input.txt
echo "# stat:" stat input.txt
echo "# Size:" size1=$(ls -l input.txt | tr -s ' ' | cut -d ' ' -f 5) size2=$(wc -c < input.txt | tr -d ' ') echo $size1, $size2 </lang>
- Output:
Test run at compileonline.com
# ls: -rw-r--r-- 1 apache apache 126 Nov 5 19:02 input.txt # stat: File: `input.txt' Size: 126 Blocks: 8 IO Block: 4096 regular file Device: 700h/1792d Inode: 2195776 Links: 1 Access: (0644/-rw-r--r--) Uid: ( 48/ apache) Gid: ( 48/ apache) Access: 2014-11-05 19:02:25.000000000 -0600 Modify: 2014-11-05 19:02:25.000000000 -0600 Change: 2014-11-05 19:02:25.000000000 -0600 # Size: 126, 126
Using wc
wc may actually read the whole file and count the bytes. Some implementations, like wc.c from GNU coreutils, can optimize wc -c by getting the length from the file's inode.
<lang bash>size1=$(wc -c < input.txt | tr -d ' ') size2=$(wc -c < /input.txt | tr -d ' ')</lang>
The peculiar use of wc -c < file, not wc -c file, is to prevent printing the file's name. Then wc only reports the size. Some versions of wc print spaces before the number; tr deletes all these spaces.
Using BSD stat
BSD has stat(1), a nonstandard command. With stat, a shell script can easily get the file size.
<lang bash>size1=$(stat -f %z input.txt) size2=$(stat -f %z /input.txt)</lang>
Z Shell
<lang bash># from module 'zsh/stat', load builtin 'zstat' zmodload -F zsh/stat b:zstat
size1=$(zstat +size input.txt) size2=$(zstat +size /input.txt)</lang>
Ursa
<lang ursa>decl file f
f.open "input.txt" out (size f) endl console f.close
f.open "/input.txt" out (size f) endl console f.close</lang>
VBScript
<lang VBScript> With CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject") WScript.Echo .GetFile("input.txt").Size WScript.Echo .GetFile("\input.txt").Size End With </lang>
Vedit macro language
<lang vedit>Num_Type(File_Size("input.txt")) Num_Type(File_Size("/input.txt"))</lang>
Visual Basic
<lang vb>Option Explicit
Sub DisplayFileSize(ByVal Path As String, ByVal Filename As String) Dim i As Long
If InStr(Len(Path), Path, "\") = 0 Then Path = Path & "\" End If On Error Resume Next 'otherwise runtime error if file does not exist i = FileLen(Path & Filename) If Err.Number = 0 Then Debug.Print "file size: " & CStr(i) & " Bytes" Else Debug.Print "error: " & Err.Description End If
End Sub
Sub Main()
DisplayFileSize CurDir(), "input.txt" DisplayFileSize CurDir(), "innputt.txt" DisplayFileSize Environ$("SystemRoot"), "input.txt"
End Sub </lang>
- Output:
file size: 37 Bytes error: file not found file size: 37 Bytes
Visual Basic .NET
Platform: .NET
<lang vbnet>Dim local As New IO.FileInfo("input.txt") Console.WriteLine(local.Length)
Dim root As New IO.FileInfo("\input.txt") Console.WriteLine(root.Length)</lang>
X86 Assembly
<lang x86asm>
- x86_64 linux nasm
section .data localFileName: db "input.txt", 0 rootFileName: db "/initrd.img", 0
section .text
global _start
_start:
; open file in current dir mov rax, 2 mov rdi, localFileName xor rsi, rsi mov rdx, 0 syscall push rax mov rdi, rax ; file descriptior mov rsi, 0 ; offset mov rdx, 2 ; whence mov rax, 8 ; sys_lseek syscall
; compare result to actual size cmp rax, 11 jne fail ; close the file pop rdi mov rax, 3 syscall
; open file in root dir mov rax, 2 mov rdi, rootFileName xor rsi, rsi mov rdx, 0 syscall push rax
mov rdi, rax ; file descriptior mov rsi, 0 ; offset mov rdx, 2 ; whence mov rax, 8 ; sys_lseek syscall
; compare result to actual size cmp rax, 37722243 jne fail
; close the file pop rdi mov rax, 3 syscall
; test successful mov rax, 60 mov rdi, 0 syscall
; test failed fail: mov rax, 60 mov rdi, 1 syscall
</lang>
zkl
<lang zkl>File.info("input.txt").println(); File.info("/input.txt").println();</lang> -->T(size,creation time,last mod time,isDir,mode), from stat(2)
- Output:
L(391,1393658766,1393658766,False,33156) Exception thrown: NameError(File.info(/input.txt): Could not open)
- Programming Tasks
- File System Operations
- Ada
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- ALGOL 68
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- Axe
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