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Home/ Questions/Q 218471
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T18:45:15+00:00 2026-05-11T18:45:15+00:00

What is the difference between read() and readline() in C#? Maybe we don’t use

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What is the difference between read() and readline() in C#?

Maybe we don’t use it but in my academy the only difference is that one has “line” and the other don’t have…
In c++, there is “cin” and it has “endl” to add line.
Can somebody tell me the difference?

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-11T18:45:15+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 6:45 pm

    Do you mean TextReader.Read and TextReader.ReadLine?

    One overload of TextReader.Read reads characters into a buffer (a char[]), and you can specify how many characters you want it to read (as a maximum). Another reads a single character, returning an int which will be -1 if you’ve reached the end of the reader.

    TextReader.ReadLine reads a whole line as a string, which doesn’t include the line terminator.

    As far as I’m aware, endl is more commonly used in conjunction with cout in C++:

    cout << "Here's a line" << endl;
    

    In .NET you’d use

    writer.WriteLine("Here's a line")
    

    to accomplish the same thing (for an appropriate TextWriter; alternatively use Console.WriteLine for the console).

    EDIT: Console.ReadLine reads a line of text, whereas Console.Read reads a single character (it’s like the parameterless overload of TextWriter.Read).

    Console.ReadLine() is basically the same as Console.In.ReadLine() and Console.Read() is basically the same as Console.In.Read().

    EDIT: In answer to your comment to the other answer, you can’t do:

    int x = Console.ReadLine();
    

    because the return type of Console.ReadLine() is a string, and there’s no conversion from string to int. You can do

    int x = Console.Read();
    

    because Console.Read() returns an int. (Again, it’s the Unicode code point or -1 for “end of data”.)

    EDIT: If you want to read an integer from the keyboard, i.e. the user types in “15” and you want to retrieve that as an integer, you should use something like:

    string line = Console.ReadLine();
    int value;
    if (int.TryParse(line, out value))
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Successfully parsed value: {0}", value);
    }
    else
    {
        Console.WriteLine("Invalid number - try again!");
    }
    
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