I’m working on a project that requires me to load some of the data from an XML file on to a GUI. The GUI allows the user to make some changes to the data. What I want to be able to do is to save these changes back onto the XML file.
I know it is possible to rewrite the whole file but the file is pretty huge, and not all the data in the file is being changed or even being used in my program.
This is my first project working with TinyXML and C++ Builder. I am just looking for some suggestions as to how I should approach this.
Unless you are certain that the new text will be exactly the same size as the old, rewriting only part of a text file is not a good idea in general. There are file formats where piecemeal replacement is possible. XML is not one of them. Not in the general case, at least.
Inserting data in the middle of a file, thus moving the rest down, is basically equivalent to loading the rest of the file, making the file bigger, and writing it back. So you may as well just load the entire file, make your modifications, and save it again. Your code will be simpler and likely not much slower.
And no, a SAX parser isn’t going to help you here. It allows you to stream reading (though I would suggest a pull parser rather than a push one), but that’s not going to allow you to insert data into the file. That’s generally not supported by most XML parsers I know of. They can write data, but writing and non-destructively inserting are two different things.