code looks like this:
struct Dog {
string name;
unsigned int age;
};
int main()
{
Dog d = {.age = 3, .name = "Lion"};
FILE *fp = fopen("dog.txt", "wb");
fwrite(&d, sizeof(d), 1, fp); //write d into dog.txt
}
My problem is what’s the point of write a data object or structure into a binary file? I assume it is for making the data generated in a running program persistent, right? If yes, then how can I get the data back? Using fread?
This makes me think of database-like stuff, dose database write data into disk the same way?
You can do it but you will have a lot of issues to care about:
It was a common practice in the early days before relational databases popularization. You can make index files pointing to a record number.
However nowadays I will advice you to make serialization and write strings instead binaries.
NOTE:
if string is something like char[40] your code maybe will survive… but if your question is about C++ and string is a class then kill you child before it grows up! The string object characters are not into your struct but in the heap.