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Reads an entire line (up to, but not including, the newline character) from a TextStream file and returns the resulting string.
Syntax
object.ReadLine( )
Remarks
The object argument is always the name of a TextStream object.
Remarks
The following example illustrates the use of the ReadLine method.
var ForReading = 1, ForWriting = 2, ForAppending = 8;
var fso = new ActiveXObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject");
// Open the file for output.
var filename = "c:\\testfile.txt";
var f = fso.OpenTextFile(filename, ForWriting, true);
// Write to the file.
f.WriteLine("Hello world!");
f.WriteLine("The quick brown fox");
f.Close();
// Open the file for input.
f = fso.OpenTextFile(filename, ForReading);
// Read from the file and display the results.
while (!f.AtEndOfStream)
{
var r = f.ReadLine();
document.write (r + "<br />");
}
f.Close();
Const ForReading = 1, ForWriting = 2, ForAppending = 8
Dim fso, MyFile, FileName, TextLine
Set fso = CreateObject("Scripting.FileSystemObject")
' Open the file for output.
FileName = "c:\testfile.txt"
Set MyFile = fso.OpenTextFile(FileName, ForWriting, True)
' Write to the file.
MyFile.WriteLine "Hello world!"
MyFile.WriteLine "The quick brown fox"
MyFile.Close
' Open the file for input.
Set MyFile = fso.OpenTextFile(FileName, ForReading)
' Read from the file and display the results.
Do While MyFile.AtEndOfStream <> True
TextLine = MyFile.ReadLine
Document.Write TextLine & "<br />"
Loop
MyFile.Close
Applies To:
Change History
Date |
History |
Reason |
---|---|---|
September 2009 |
Removed unused constants from examples. |
Customer feedback. |
April 2009 |
Improved examples. |
Information enhancement. |
March 2009 |
Improved examples. |
Customer feedback. |
See Also
Read Method
ReadAll Method
Skip Method
SkipLine Method
Working with Files