QFile Class

The QFile class provides an interface for reading from and writing to files. More...

Header: #include <QFile>
CMake: find_package(Qt6 REQUIRED COMPONENTS Core)
target_link_libraries(mytarget PRIVATE Qt6::Core)
qmake: QT += core
Inherits: QFileDevice
Inherited By:

QTemporaryFile

Note: All functions in this class are reentrant.

Public Functions

QFile()
QFile(const QString &name)
(since 6.0) QFile(const std::filesystem::path &name)
QFile(QObject *parent)
QFile(const QString &name, QObject *parent)
(since 6.0) QFile(const std::filesystem::path &name, QObject *parent)
virtual ~QFile()
bool copy(const QString &newName)
(since 6.0) bool copy(const std::filesystem::path &newName)
bool exists() const
(since 6.0) std::filesystem::path filesystemFileName() const
(since 6.3) std::filesystem::path filesystemSymLinkTarget() const
bool link(const QString &linkName)
(since 6.0) bool link(const std::filesystem::path &newName)
bool moveToTrash()
(since 6.3) bool open(QIODeviceBase::OpenMode mode, QFileDevice::Permissions permissions)
bool open(FILE *fh, QIODeviceBase::OpenMode mode, QFileDevice::FileHandleFlags handleFlags = DontCloseHandle)
bool open(int fd, QIODeviceBase::OpenMode mode, QFileDevice::FileHandleFlags handleFlags = DontCloseHandle)
bool remove()
bool rename(const QString &newName)
(since 6.0) bool rename(const std::filesystem::path &newName)
void setFileName(const QString &name)
(since 6.0) void setFileName(const std::filesystem::path &name)
QString symLinkTarget() const

Reimplemented Public Functions

virtual QString fileName() const override
virtual bool open(QIODeviceBase::OpenMode mode) override
virtual QFileDevice::Permissions permissions() const override
virtual bool resize(qint64 sz) override
virtual bool setPermissions(QFileDevice::Permissions permissions) override
virtual qint64 size() const override

Static Public Members

bool copy(const QString &fileName, const QString &newName)
QString decodeName(const QByteArray &localFileName)
QString decodeName(const char *localFileName)
QByteArray encodeName(const QString &fileName)
bool exists(const QString &fileName)
(since 6.3) std::filesystem::path filesystemSymLinkTarget(const std::filesystem::path &fileName)
bool link(const QString &fileName, const QString &linkName)
bool moveToTrash(const QString &fileName, QString *pathInTrash = nullptr)
QFileDevice::Permissions permissions(const QString &fileName)
(since 6.0) QFileDevice::Permissions permissions(const std::filesystem::path &filename)
bool remove(const QString &fileName)
bool rename(const QString &oldName, const QString &newName)
bool resize(const QString &fileName, qint64 sz)
bool setPermissions(const QString &fileName, QFileDevice::Permissions permissions)
(since 6.0) bool setPermissions(const std::filesystem::path &filename, QFileDevice::Permissions permissionSpec)
QString symLinkTarget(const QString &fileName)

Detailed Description

QFile is an I/O device for reading and writing text and binary files and resources. A QFile may be used by itself or, more conveniently, with a QTextStream or QDataStream.

The file name is usually passed in the constructor, but it can be set at any time using setFileName(). QFile expects the file separator to be '/' regardless of operating system. The use of other separators (e.g., '\') is not supported.

You can check for a file's existence using exists(), and remove a file using remove(). (More advanced file system related operations are provided by QFileInfo and QDir.)

The file is opened with open(), closed with close(), and flushed with flush(). Data is usually read and written using QDataStream or QTextStream, but you can also call the QIODevice-inherited functions read(), readLine(), readAll(), write(). QFile also inherits getChar(), putChar(), and ungetChar(), which work one character at a time.

The size of the file is returned by size(). You can get the current file position using pos(), or move to a new file position using seek(). If you've reached the end of the file, atEnd() returns true.

Reading Files Directly

The following example reads a text file line by line:

     QFile file("in.txt");
     if (!file.open(QIODevice::ReadOnly | QIODevice::Text))
         return;

     while (!file.atEnd()) {
         QByteArray line = file.readLine();
         process_line(line);
     }

The QIODevice::Text flag passed to open() tells Qt to convert Windows-style line terminators ("\r\n") into C++-style terminators ("\n"). By default, QFile assumes binary, i.e. it doesn't perform any conversion on the bytes stored in the file.

Using Streams to Read Files

The next example uses QTextStream to read a text file line by line:

     QFile file("in.txt");
     if (!file.open(QIODevice::ReadOnly | QIODevice::Text))
         return;

     QTextStream in(&file);
     while (!in.atEnd()) {
         QString line = in.readLine();
         process_line(line);
     }

QTextStream takes care of converting the 8-bit data stored on disk into a 16-bit Unicode QString. By default, it assumes that the file is encoded in UTF-8. This can be changed using QTextStream::setEncoding().

To write text, we can use operator<<(), which is overloaded to take a QTextStream on the left and various data types (including QString) on the right:

     QFile file("out.txt");
     if (!file.open(QIODevice::WriteOnly | QIODevice::Text))
         return;

     QTextStream out(&file);
     out << "The magic number is: " << 49 << "\n";

QDataStream is similar, in that you can use operator<<() to write data and operator>>() to read it back. See the class documentation for details.

Signals

Unlike other QIODevice implementations, such as QTcpSocket, QFile does not emit the aboutToClose(), bytesWritten(), or readyRead() signals. This implementation detail means that QFile is not suitable for reading and writing certain types of files, such as device files on Unix platforms.

Platform Specific Issues

Qt APIs related to I/O use UTF-16 based QStrings to represent file paths. Standard C++ APIs (<cstdio> or <iostream>) or platform-specific APIs however often need a 8-bit encoded path. You can use encodeName() and decodeName() to convert between both representations.

On Unix, there are some special system files (e.g. in /proc) for which size() will always return 0, yet you may still be able to read more data from such a file; the data is generated in direct response to you calling read(). In this case, however, you cannot use atEnd() to determine if there is more data to read (since atEnd() will return true for a file that claims to have size 0). Instead, you should either call readAll(), or call read() or readLine() repeatedly until no more data can be read. The next example uses QTextStream to read /proc/modules line by line:

     QFile file("/proc/modules");
     if (!file.open(QIODevice::ReadOnly | QIODevice::Text))
         return;

     QTextStream in(&file);
     QString line = in.readLine();
     while (!line.isNull()) {
         process_line(line);
         line = in.readLine();
     }

File permissions are handled differently on Unix-like systems and Windows. In a non writable directory on Unix-like systems, files cannot be created. This is not always the case on Windows, where, for instance, the 'My Documents' directory usually is not writable, but it is still possible to create files in it.

Qt's understanding of file permissions is limited, which affects especially the QFile::setPermissions() function. On Windows, Qt will set only the legacy read-only flag, and that only when none of the Write* flags are passed. Qt does not manipulate access control lists (ACLs), which makes this function mostly useless for NTFS volumes. It may still be of use for USB sticks that use VFAT file systems. POSIX ACLs are not manipulated, either.

On Android, some limitations apply when dealing with content URIs:

  • Access permissions might be needed by prompting the user through the QFileDialog which implements Android's native file picker.
  • Aim to follow the Scoped storage guidelines, such as using app specific directories instead of other public external directories. For more information, also see storage best practices.
  • Due to the design of Qt APIs (e.g. QFile), it's not possible to fully integrate the latter APIs with Android's MediaStore APIs.

See also QTextStream, QDataStream, QFileInfo, QDir, and The Qt Resource System.

Member Function Documentation

QFile::QFile()

Constructs a QFile object.

QFile::QFile(const QString &name)

Constructs a new file object to represent the file with the given name.

Note: In versions up to and including Qt 6.8, this constructor is implicit, for backward compatibility. Starting from Qt 6.9 this constructor is unconditionally explicit. Users can force this constructor to be explicit even in earlier versions of Qt by defining the QT_EXPLICIT_QFILE_CONSTRUCTION_FROM_PATH macro before including any Qt header.

[since 6.0] QFile::QFile(const std::filesystem::path &name)

Constructs a new file object to represent the file with the given name.

Note: In versions up to and including Qt 6.8, this constructor is implicit, for backward compatibility. Starting from Qt 6.9 this constructor is unconditionally explicit. Users can force this constructor to be explicit even in earlier versions of Qt by defining the QT_EXPLICIT_QFILE_CONSTRUCTION_FROM_PATH macro before including any Qt header.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

[explicit] QFile::QFile(QObject *parent)

Constructs a new file object with the given parent.

QFile::QFile(const QString &name, QObject *parent)

Constructs a new file object with the given parent to represent the file with the specified name.

[since 6.0] QFile::QFile(const std::filesystem::path &name, QObject *parent)

Constructs a new file object with the given parent to represent the file with the specified name.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

[virtual noexcept] QFile::~QFile()

Destroys the file object, closing it if necessary.

bool QFile::copy(const QString &newName)

Copies the file named fileName() to newName.

This file is closed before it is copied.

If the copied file is a symbolic link (symlink), the file it refers to is copied, not the link itself. With the exception of permissions, which are copied, no other file metadata is copied.

Returns true if successful; otherwise returns false.

Note that if a file with the name newName already exists, copy() returns false. This means QFile will not overwrite it.

Note: On Android, this operation is not yet supported for content scheme URIs.

See also setFileName().

[static] bool QFile::copy(const QString &fileName, const QString &newName)

This is an overloaded function.

Copies the file named fileName to newName.

This file is closed before it is copied.

If the copied file is a symbolic link (symlink), the file it refers to is copied, not the link itself. With the exception of permissions, which are copied, no other file metadata is copied.

Returns true if successful; otherwise returns false.

Note that if a file with the name newName already exists, copy() returns false. This means QFile will not overwrite it.

Note: On Android, this operation is not yet supported for content scheme URIs.

See also rename().

[since 6.0] bool QFile::copy(const std::filesystem::path &newName)

This is an overloaded function.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

[static] QString QFile::decodeName(const QByteArray &localFileName)

This does the reverse of QFile::encodeName() using localFileName.

See also encodeName().

[static] QString QFile::decodeName(const char *localFileName)

This is an overloaded function.

Returns the Unicode version of the given localFileName. See encodeName() for details.

[static] QByteArray QFile::encodeName(const QString &fileName)

Converts fileName to an 8-bit encoding that you can use in native APIs. On Windows, the encoding is the one from active Windows (ANSI) codepage. On other platforms, this is UTF-8, for macOS in decomposed form (NFD).

See also decodeName().

[static] bool QFile::exists(const QString &fileName)

Returns true if the file specified by fileName exists; otherwise returns false.

Note: If fileName is a symlink that points to a non-existing file, false is returned.

bool QFile::exists() const

This is an overloaded function.

Returns true if the file specified by fileName() exists; otherwise returns false.

See also fileName() and setFileName().

[override virtual] QString QFile::fileName() const

Reimplements: QFileDevice::fileName() const.

Returns the name set by setFileName() or to the QFile constructors.

See also setFileName() and QFileInfo::fileName().

[since 6.0] std::filesystem::path QFile::filesystemFileName() const

Returns fileName() as std::filesystem::path.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

[since 6.3] std::filesystem::path QFile::filesystemSymLinkTarget() const

Returns symLinkTarget() as std::filesystem::path.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.3.

[static, since 6.3] std::filesystem::path QFile::filesystemSymLinkTarget(const std::filesystem::path &fileName)

Returns symLinkTarget() as std::filesystem::path of fileName.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.3.

Creates a link named linkName that points to the file currently specified by fileName(). What a link is depends on the underlying filesystem (be it a shortcut on Windows or a symbolic link on Unix). Returns true if successful; otherwise returns false.

This function will not overwrite an already existing entity in the file system; in this case, link() will return false and set error() to return RenameError.

Note: To create a valid link on Windows, linkName must have a .lnk file extension.

See also setFileName().

This is an overloaded function.

Creates a link named linkName that points to the file fileName. What a link is depends on the underlying filesystem (be it a shortcut on Windows or a symbolic link on Unix). Returns true if successful; otherwise returns false.

See also link().

This is an overloaded function.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

bool QFile::moveToTrash()

Moves the file specified by fileName() to the trash. Returns true if successful, and sets the fileName() to the path at which the file can be found within the trash; otherwise returns false.

The time for this function to run is independent of the size of the file being trashed. If this function is called on a directory, it may be proportional to the number of files being trashed.

This function uses the Windows and macOS APIs to perform the trashing on those two operating systems. Elsewhere (Unix systems), this function implements the FreeDesktop.org Trash specification version 1.0.

Note: When using the FreeDesktop.org Trash implementation, this function will fail if it is unable to move the files to the trash location by way of file renames and hardlinks. This condition arises if the file being trashed resides on a volume (mount point) on which the current user does not have permission to create the .Trash directory, or with some unusual filesystem types or configurations (such as sub-volumes that aren't themselves mount points).

Note: On systems where the system API doesn't report the location of the file in the trash, fileName() will be set to the null string once the file has been moved. On systems that don't have a trash can, this function always returns false.

[static] bool QFile::moveToTrash(const QString &fileName, QString *pathInTrash = nullptr)

This is an overloaded function.

Moves the file specified by fileName to the trash. Returns true if successful, and sets pathInTrash (if provided) to the path at which the file can be found within the trash; otherwise returns false.

The time for this function to run is independent of the size of the file being trashed. If this function is called on a directory, it may be proportional to the number of files being trashed.

This function uses the Windows and macOS APIs to perform the trashing on those two operating systems. Elsewhere (Unix systems), this function implements the FreeDesktop.org Trash specification version 1.0.

Note: When using the FreeDesktop.org Trash implementation, this function will fail if it is unable to move the files to the trash location by way of file renames and hardlinks. This condition arises if the file being trashed resides on a volume (mount point) on which the current user does not have permission to create the .Trash directory, or with some unusual filesystem types or configurations (such as sub-volumes that aren't themselves mount points).

Note: On systems where the system API doesn't report the path of the file in the trash, pathInTrash will be set to the null string once the file has been moved. On systems that don't have a trash can, this function always returns false.

[override virtual] bool QFile::open(QIODeviceBase::OpenMode mode)

Reimplements: QIODevice::open(QIODeviceBase::OpenMode mode).

Opens the file using OpenMode mode, returning true if successful; otherwise false.

The mode must be QIODevice::ReadOnly, QIODevice::WriteOnly, or QIODevice::ReadWrite. It may also have additional flags, such as QIODevice::Text and QIODevice::Unbuffered.

Note: In WriteOnly or ReadWrite mode, if the relevant file does not already exist, this function will try to create a new file before opening it. The file will be created with mode 0666 masked by the umask on POSIX systems, and with permissions inherited from the parent directory on Windows. On Android, it's expected to have access permission to the parent of the file name, otherwise, it won't be possible to create this non-existing file.

See also QIODevice::OpenMode and setFileName().

[since 6.3] bool QFile::open(QIODeviceBase::OpenMode mode, QFileDevice::Permissions permissions)

This is an overloaded function.

If the file does not exist and mode implies creating it, it is created with the specified permissions.

On POSIX systems the actual permissions are influenced by the value of umask.

On Windows the permissions are emulated using ACLs. These ACLs may be in non-canonical order when the group is granted less permissions than others. Files and directories with such permissions will generate warnings when the Security tab of the Properties dialog is opened. Granting the group all permissions granted to others avoids such warnings.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.3.

See also QIODevice::OpenMode and setFileName().

bool QFile::open(FILE *fh, QIODeviceBase::OpenMode mode, QFileDevice::FileHandleFlags handleFlags = DontCloseHandle)

This is an overloaded function.

Opens the existing file handle fh in the given mode. handleFlags may be used to specify additional options. Returns true if successful; otherwise returns false.

Example:

 #include <stdio.h>

 void printError(const char* msg)
 {
     QFile file;
     file.open(stderr, QIODevice::WriteOnly);
     file.write(msg, qstrlen(msg));        // write to stderr
     file.close();
 }

When a QFile is opened using this function, behaviour of close() is controlled by the AutoCloseHandle flag. If AutoCloseHandle is specified, and this function succeeds, then calling close() closes the adopted handle. Otherwise, close() does not actually close the file, but only flushes it.

Warning:

  1. If fh does not refer to a regular file, e.g., it is stdin, stdout, or stderr, you may not be able to seek(). size() returns 0 in those cases. See QIODevice::isSequential() for more information.
  2. Since this function opens the file without specifying the file name, you cannot use this QFile with a QFileInfo.

Note for the Windows Platform

fh must be opened in binary mode (i.e., the mode string must contain 'b', as in "rb" or "wb") when accessing files and other random-access devices. Qt will translate the end-of-line characters if you pass QIODevice::Text to mode. Sequential devices, such as stdin and stdout, are unaffected by this limitation.

You need to enable support for console applications in order to use the stdin, stdout and stderr streams at the console. To do this, add the following declaration to your application's project file:

 CONFIG += console

See also close().

bool QFile::open(int fd, QIODeviceBase::OpenMode mode, QFileDevice::FileHandleFlags handleFlags = DontCloseHandle)

This is an overloaded function.

Opens the existing file descriptor fd in the given mode. handleFlags may be used to specify additional options. Returns true if successful; otherwise returns false.

When a QFile is opened using this function, behaviour of close() is controlled by the AutoCloseHandle flag. If AutoCloseHandle is specified, and this function succeeds, then calling close() closes the adopted handle. Otherwise, close() does not actually close the file, but only flushes it.

Warning: If fd is not a regular file, e.g, it is 0 (stdin), 1 (stdout), or 2 (stderr), you may not be able to seek(). In those cases, size() returns 0. See QIODevice::isSequential() for more information.

Warning: Since this function opens the file without specifying the file name, you cannot use this QFile with a QFileInfo.

See also close().

[override virtual] QFileDevice::Permissions QFile::permissions() const

Reimplements: QFileDevice::permissions() const.

See also setPermissions().

[static] QFileDevice::Permissions QFile::permissions(const QString &fileName)

This is an overloaded function.

Returns the complete OR-ed together combination of QFile::Permission for fileName.

[static, since 6.0] QFileDevice::Permissions QFile::permissions(const std::filesystem::path &filename)

This is an overloaded function.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

bool QFile::remove()

Removes the file specified by fileName(). Returns true if successful; otherwise returns false.

The file is closed before it is removed.

See also setFileName().

[static] bool QFile::remove(const QString &fileName)

This is an overloaded function.

Removes the file specified by the fileName given.

Returns true if successful; otherwise returns false.

See also remove().

bool QFile::rename(const QString &newName)

Renames the file currently specified by fileName() to newName. Returns true if successful; otherwise returns false.

If a file with the name newName already exists, rename() returns false (i.e., QFile will not overwrite it).

The file is closed before it is renamed.

If the rename operation fails, Qt will attempt to copy this file's contents to newName, and then remove this file, keeping only newName. If that copy operation fails or this file can't be removed, the destination file newName is removed to restore the old state.

See also setFileName().

[static] bool QFile::rename(const QString &oldName, const QString &newName)

This is an overloaded function.

Renames the file oldName to newName. Returns true if successful; otherwise returns false.

If a file with the name newName already exists, rename() returns false (i.e., QFile will not overwrite it).

See also rename().

[since 6.0] bool QFile::rename(const std::filesystem::path &newName)

This is an overloaded function.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

[override virtual] bool QFile::resize(qint64 sz)

Reimplements: QFileDevice::resize(qint64 sz).

[static] bool QFile::resize(const QString &fileName, qint64 sz)

This is an overloaded function.

Sets fileName to size (in bytes) sz. Returns true if the resize succeeds; false otherwise. If sz is larger than fileName currently is the new bytes will be set to 0, if sz is smaller the file is simply truncated.

Warning: This function can fail if the file doesn't exist.

See also resize().

void QFile::setFileName(const QString &name)

Sets the name of the file. The name can have no path, a relative path, or an absolute path.

Do not call this function if the file has already been opened.

If the file name has no path or a relative path, the path used will be the application's current directory path at the time of the open() call.

Example:

 QFile file;
 QDir::setCurrent("/tmp");
 file.setFileName("readme.txt");
 QDir::setCurrent("/home");
 file.open(QIODevice::ReadOnly);      // opens "/home/readme.txt" under Unix

Note that the directory separator "/" works for all operating systems supported by Qt.

See also fileName(), QFileInfo, and QDir.

[since 6.0] void QFile::setFileName(const std::filesystem::path &name)

This is an overloaded function.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

[override virtual] bool QFile::setPermissions(QFileDevice::Permissions permissions)

Reimplements: QFileDevice::setPermissions(QFileDevice::Permissions permissions).

Sets the permissions for the file to the permissions specified. Returns true if successful, or false if the permissions cannot be modified.

Warning: This function does not manipulate ACLs, which may limit its effectiveness.

See also permissions() and setFileName().

[static] bool QFile::setPermissions(const QString &fileName, QFileDevice::Permissions permissions)

This is an overloaded function.

Sets the permissions for fileName file to permissions.

[static, since 6.0] bool QFile::setPermissions(const std::filesystem::path &filename, QFileDevice::Permissions permissionSpec)

This is an overloaded function.

This function was introduced in Qt 6.0.

[override virtual] qint64 QFile::size() const

Reimplements: QFileDevice::size() const.

[static] QString QFile::symLinkTarget(const QString &fileName)

Returns the absolute path of the file or directory referred to by the symlink (or shortcut on Windows) specified by fileName, or returns an empty string if the fileName does not correspond to a symbolic link.

This name may not represent an existing file; it is only a string. QFile::exists() returns true if the symlink points to an existing file.

QString QFile::symLinkTarget() const

This is an overloaded function.

Returns the absolute path of the file or directory a symlink (or shortcut on Windows) points to, or a an empty string if the object isn't a symbolic link.

This name may not represent an existing file; it is only a string. QFile::exists() returns true if the symlink points to an existing file.

See also fileName() and setFileName().