I’m writing a Huffman encoding program in C++, and am using this website as a reference:
http://algs4.cs.princeton.edu/55compression/Huffman.java.html
I’m now at the writeTrie method, and here is my version:
// write bitstring-encoded tree to standard output
void writeTree(struct node *tempnode){
if(isLeaf(*tempnode)){
tempfile << "1";
fprintf(stderr, "writing 1 to file\n");
tempfile << tempnode->ch;
//tempfile.write(&tempnode->ch,1);
return;
}
else{
tempfile << "0";
fprintf(stderr, "writing 0 to file\n");
writeTree(tempnode->left);
writeTree(tempnode->right);
}
}
Look at the line commented – let’s say I’m writing to a text file, but I want to write the bytes that make up the char at tempnode->ch (which is an unsigned char, btw). Any suggestions for how to go about doing this? The line commented gives an invalid conversion error from unsigned char* to const char*.
Thanks in advance!
EDIT: To clarify: For instance, I’d like my final text file to be in binary — 1’s and 0’s only. If you look at the header of the link I provided, they give an example of “ABRACADABRA!” and the resulting compression. I’d like to take the char (such as in the example above ‘A’), use it’s unsigned int number (A=’65’), and write 65 in binary, as a byte.
A char is identical to a byte. The preceding line
tempfile << tempnode->ch;already does exactly what you seem to want.There is no overload of
writeforunsigned char, but if you want, you can doThis is rather ugly, but it does exactly the same thing as
tempfile << tempnode->ch.EDIT: Oh, you want to write a sequence of
1and0characters for the bits in the byte. C++ has an obscure trick for that: