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Home/ Questions/Q 291455
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 12, 20262026-05-12T06:05:26+00:00 2026-05-12T06:05:26+00:00

I’m trying to edit a text file to remove the vowels from it and

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I’m trying to edit a text file to remove the vowels from it and for some reason nothing happens to the text file. I think it may be because a mode argument needs to be passed in the filestream.

[SOLVED]

Code:

#include "std_lib_facilities.h"

bool isvowel(char s)
{
     return (s == 'a' || s == 'e' || s =='i' || s == 'o' || s == 'u';)
}


void vowel_removal(string& s)
{
     for(int i = 0; i < s.length(); ++i)
             if(isvowel(s[i]))
                      s[i] = ' ';
}

int main()
{
    vector<string>wordhold;
    cout << "Enter file name.\n";
    string filename;
    cin >> filename;
    ifstream f(filename.c_str());

    string word;
    while(f>>word) wordhold.push_back(word);

    f.close();

    ofstream out(filename.c_str(), ios::out);
    for(int i = 0; i < wordhold.size(); ++i){
            vowel_removal(wordhold[i]);
            out << wordhold[i] << " ";}


    keep_window_open();
}
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1 Answer

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-12T06:05:26+00:00Added an answer on May 12, 2026 at 6:05 am

    Reading and writing on the same stream results in an error. Check f.bad() and f.eof() after the loop terminates. I’m afraid that you have two choices:

    1. Read and write to different files
    2. Read the entire file into memory, close it, and overwrite the original

    As Anders stated, you probably don’t want to use operator<< for this since it will break everything up by whitespace. You probably want std::getline() to slurp in the lines. Pull them into a std::vector<std::string>, close the file, edit the vector, and overwrite the file.

    Edit:

    Anders was right on the money with his description. Think of a file as a byte stream. If you want to transform the file in place, try something like the following:

    void
    remove_vowel(char& ch) {
        if (ch=='a' || ch=='e' || ch=='i' || ch =='o'  || ch=='u') {
            ch = ' ';
        }
    }
    
    int
    main() {
        char const delim = '\n';
        std::fstream::streampos start_of_line;
        std::string buf;
        std::fstream fs("file.txt");
    
        start_of_line = fs.tellg();
        while (std::getline(fs, buf, delim)) {
            std::for_each(buf.begin(), buf.end(), &remove_vowel);
            fs.seekg(start_of_line);     // go back to the start and...
            fs << buf << delim;          // overwrite the line, then ...
            start_of_line = fs.tellg();  // grab the next line start
        }
        return 0;
     }
    

    There are some small problems with this code like it won’t work for MS-DOS style text files but you can probably figure out how to account for that if you have to.

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