you can use some methods of NSString, but I doubt wether NSString
performs well with really big string.
I once tried to work with the Unix tool 'grep' for searching
something in the iTunes Library xml file. That was amazingly fast!
You can use it in cocoa with NSPipe etc.
Op 13-jun-2009, o
On 13 Jun 2009, at 00:27, Angelo Chen wrote:
Hi Stephen,
Thanks for the quick reply, it is a binary file, coming from
Quicktime's mov, I need to search backward for a string 'free', then
change it to 'moov', so search should start from the end of file,
any ideas? Thanks,
Angelo
This is n
tler 寫道﹕
寄件人: Stephen J. Butler
主題: Re: searching a string in big file
收件人:
副本(CC): cocoa-dev@lists.apple.com
日期: 2009年6月13日,星期六,下午2:04
2009/6/13 Angelo Chen :
> I need to open a big file and search for a certain string, if found, I need
> tup do some updates and write back the file,
2009/6/13 Angelo Chen :
> I need to open a big file and search for a certain string, if found, I need
> tup do some updates and write back the file, any idea what approach I should
> take? Thanks,
32 or 64 bit? What is the encoding (ASCII, UTF-8, UTF-16, etc)? Are
the updates in place (that is,
Hi,
I need to open a big file and search for a certain string, if found, I need tup
do some updates and write back the file, any idea what approach I should take?
Thanks,
Angelo
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