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Home/ Questions/Q 7052991
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 28, 20262026-05-28T03:27:01+00:00 2026-05-28T03:27:01+00:00

I have two versions of a program that does basically the same thing, getting

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I have two versions of a program that does basically the same thing, getting the biggest length of a line in a file, I have a file with about 8 thousand lines, my code in C is a little bit more primitive (of course!) than the code I have in C++. The C programm takes about 2 seconds to run, while the program in C++ takes 10 seconds to run (same file I am testing with for both cases). But why? I was expecting it to take the same amount of time or a little bit more but not 8 seconds slower!

my code in C:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h> 
#include <string.h>

#if _DEBUG
    #define DEBUG_PATH "../Debug/"
#else
    #define DEBUG_PATH ""
#endif

const char FILE_NAME[] = DEBUG_PATH "data.noun";

int main()
{   
    int sPos = 0;
    int maxCount = 0;
    int cPos = 0;
    int ch;
    FILE *in_file;              

    in_file = fopen(FILE_NAME, "r");
    if (in_file == NULL) 
    {
        printf("Cannot open %s\n", FILE_NAME);
        exit(8);
    }       

    while (1) 
    {
        ch = fgetc(in_file);
        if(ch == 0x0A || ch == EOF) // \n or \r or \r\n or end of file
        {           
            if ((cPos - sPos) > maxCount)
                maxCount = (cPos - sPos);

            if(ch == EOF)
                break;

            sPos = cPos;
        }
        else
            cPos++;
    }

    fclose(in_file);

    printf("Max line length: %i\n",  maxCount); 

    getch();
    return (0);
}

my code in C++:

#include <iostream>
#include <fstream>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <string>

using namespace std;

#ifdef _DEBUG
    #define FILE_PATH "../Debug/data.noun"
#else
    #define FILE_PATH "data.noun"
#endif

int main()
{
    string fileName = FILE_PATH;
    string s = "";
    ifstream file;
    int size = 0;

    file.open(fileName.c_str());
    if(!file)
    {
        printf("could not open file!");
        return 0;
    }

    while(getline(file, s) )
            size = (s.length() > size) ? s.length() : size;
    file.close();

    printf("biggest line in file: %i", size);   

    getchar();
    return 0;
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-28T03:27:02+00:00Added an answer on May 28, 2026 at 3:27 am

    The C++ version constantly allocates and deallocates instances of std::string. Memory allocation is a costly operation. In addition to that the constructors/destructors are executed.

    The C version however uses constant memory, and just does was necessary: Reading in single characters, setting the line-length counter to the new value if higher, for each newline and that’s it.

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