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How to write entire QVector to a binary file?

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  • CJhaC CJha

    @J-Hilk I am unable to find any examples to tell me how to get the header. The QDataStream class description only says just a little about serializing QVectors do you know any examples that I can follow so that I have an idea how to read my binary file?

    J.HilkJ Offline
    J.HilkJ Offline
    J.Hilk
    Moderators
    wrote on last edited by J.Hilk
    #8

    @CJha you can take a look into the source code

    no idea what version you're using, but I found this

    00717b7a-3822-470e-a26a-220eb197ba6e-image.png

    066e8007-1c4a-4394-aec7-7138631cfe9e-image.png

    link


    Be aware of the Qt Code of Conduct, when posting : https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct


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    Christian EhrlicherC 1 Reply Last reply
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    • J.HilkJ J.Hilk

      @CJha you can take a look into the source code

      no idea what version you're using, but I found this

      00717b7a-3822-470e-a26a-220eb197ba6e-image.png

      066e8007-1c4a-4394-aec7-7138631cfe9e-image.png

      link

      Christian EhrlicherC Online
      Christian EhrlicherC Online
      Christian Ehrlicher
      Lifetime Qt Champion
      wrote on last edited by
      #9

      @J-Hilk But this is internal and may change (although the chance is very very low)

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      • CJhaC Offline
        CJhaC Offline
        CJha
        wrote on last edited by
        #10

        @J-Hilk Thanks, I will go through the document and see if it can be helpful to me.
        @Christian-Ehrlicher @JonB The only other way is to iterate through a QVector<double>, and is a time-consuming process, especially with millions of data points, and that's why I am interested in doing it directly.

        JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
        0
        • Christian EhrlicherC Online
          Christian EhrlicherC Online
          Christian Ehrlicher
          Lifetime Qt Champion
          wrote on last edited by
          #11

          @CJha said in How to write entire QVector to a binary file?:

          and is a time-consuming process, especially with millions of data points, and that's why I am interested in doing it directly.

          Did you look at the QDataStream implementation? It does exactly the same... so why should this be faster?

          Qt Online Installer direct download: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/online_installers/
          Visit the Qt Academy at https://academy.qt.io/catalog

          CJhaC 1 Reply Last reply
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          • CJhaC CJha

            @Christian-Ehrlicher Hi, I cannot, I have to read it in Matlab.

            VRoninV Offline
            VRoninV Offline
            VRonin
            wrote on last edited by
            #12

            @CJha said in How to write entire QVector to a binary file?:

            I have to read it in Matlab.

            If I remeber correctly Matlab reads csv (aka text) so QTextStream is what you want. something like:

            QFile file("BinTest.bin");
            file.open(QIODevice::WriteOnly | QIODevice::Text);
            QTextStream out(&file);
            QVector<double> vec;
            for(int ii = 0; ii < 10; ++ii){
                vec << ii * 0.33;
            }
            for(auto&& val : vec)
            out << val << ',';
            file.close();
            

            "La mort n'est rien, mais vivre vaincu et sans gloire, c'est mourir tous les jours"
            ~Napoleon Bonaparte

            On a crusade to banish setIndexWidget() from the holy land of Qt

            CJhaC 1 Reply Last reply
            1
            • Christian EhrlicherC Christian Ehrlicher

              @CJha said in How to write entire QVector to a binary file?:

              and is a time-consuming process, especially with millions of data points, and that's why I am interested in doing it directly.

              Did you look at the QDataStream implementation? It does exactly the same... so why should this be faster?

              CJhaC Offline
              CJhaC Offline
              CJha
              wrote on last edited by
              #13

              @Christian-Ehrlicher I didn't know that before I saw the source code for QDataStream. I assumed since for a QVector data points are in adjacent memory positions pushing an entire vector into a binary file must be faster than iterating over it.

              1 Reply Last reply
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              • CJhaC CJha

                @J-Hilk Thanks, I will go through the document and see if it can be helpful to me.
                @Christian-Ehrlicher @JonB The only other way is to iterate through a QVector<double>, and is a time-consuming process, especially with millions of data points, and that's why I am interested in doing it directly.

                JonBJ Offline
                JonBJ Offline
                JonB
                wrote on last edited by JonB
                #14

                @CJha said in How to write entire QVector to a binary file?:

                The only other way is to iterate through a QVector<double>, and is a time-consuming process, especially with millions of data points

                Yep. That's what has to be done, and it's what the << serializer does, as @J-Hilk showed you. The only other way would be if you can get the address of contiguous QVector memory and save from there, which I'm guessing can be done. However...

                ...If @VRonin's latest post is correct and you're supposed to produce text instead to export then you cannot help but do it one-by-one....

                P.S.
                BTW, you'd have to test, but my guess is that code to output data points one-by-one instead of in a contiguous clump is not what would be slow over 1,000,000 points --- rather, the size of the output written to file will be what is significant....

                1 Reply Last reply
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                • Christian EhrlicherC Online
                  Christian EhrlicherC Online
                  Christian Ehrlicher
                  Lifetime Qt Champion
                  wrote on last edited by
                  #15

                  You're correct with the adjacent memory but QVector can also hold objects so memcpy'ing it out will not work there. You can use memcpy if you want in your case but QDataStream is generic and has no optimizations for such things.

                  Qt Online Installer direct download: https://download.qt.io/official_releases/online_installers/
                  Visit the Qt Academy at https://academy.qt.io/catalog

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                  • VRoninV VRonin

                    @CJha said in How to write entire QVector to a binary file?:

                    I have to read it in Matlab.

                    If I remeber correctly Matlab reads csv (aka text) so QTextStream is what you want. something like:

                    QFile file("BinTest.bin");
                    file.open(QIODevice::WriteOnly | QIODevice::Text);
                    QTextStream out(&file);
                    QVector<double> vec;
                    for(int ii = 0; ii < 10; ++ii){
                        vec << ii * 0.33;
                    }
                    for(auto&& val : vec)
                    out << val << ',';
                    file.close();
                    
                    CJhaC Offline
                    CJhaC Offline
                    CJha
                    wrote on last edited by
                    #16

                    @VRonin Yes, but writing a .csv file takes much longer than writing a binary file (almost 10 times more for large data sets). I have tried and tested it. I am gathering data at a much faster rate, up to 1 million doubles per second and I have to write it to a file continuously for hours, and this file will be analysed in Matlab by researchers. If I write 1 million data points in a .csv file it takes around 4 seconds while doing the same in a binary file takes around 400 milliseconds.

                    JonBJ jsulmJ J.HilkJ 3 Replies Last reply
                    0
                    • CJhaC CJha

                      @VRonin Yes, but writing a .csv file takes much longer than writing a binary file (almost 10 times more for large data sets). I have tried and tested it. I am gathering data at a much faster rate, up to 1 million doubles per second and I have to write it to a file continuously for hours, and this file will be analysed in Matlab by researchers. If I write 1 million data points in a .csv file it takes around 4 seconds while doing the same in a binary file takes around 400 milliseconds.

                      JonBJ Offline
                      JonBJ Offline
                      JonB
                      wrote on last edited by
                      #17

                      @CJha
                      OK, so STOP and tell us exactly what format MatLab will accept, and take it from there...

                      1 Reply Last reply
                      2
                      • CJhaC CJha

                        @VRonin Yes, but writing a .csv file takes much longer than writing a binary file (almost 10 times more for large data sets). I have tried and tested it. I am gathering data at a much faster rate, up to 1 million doubles per second and I have to write it to a file continuously for hours, and this file will be analysed in Matlab by researchers. If I write 1 million data points in a .csv file it takes around 4 seconds while doing the same in a binary file takes around 400 milliseconds.

                        jsulmJ Offline
                        jsulmJ Offline
                        jsulm
                        Lifetime Qt Champion
                        wrote on last edited by
                        #18

                        @CJha But does Matlab support any binary format? You have to write in a format supported by Matlab.

                        https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                        1 Reply Last reply
                        0
                        • CJhaC CJha

                          @VRonin Yes, but writing a .csv file takes much longer than writing a binary file (almost 10 times more for large data sets). I have tried and tested it. I am gathering data at a much faster rate, up to 1 million doubles per second and I have to write it to a file continuously for hours, and this file will be analysed in Matlab by researchers. If I write 1 million data points in a .csv file it takes around 4 seconds while doing the same in a binary file takes around 400 milliseconds.

                          J.HilkJ Offline
                          J.HilkJ Offline
                          J.Hilk
                          Moderators
                          wrote on last edited by
                          #19

                          @CJha said in How to write entire QVector to a binary file?:

                          I am gathering data at a much faster rate, up to 1 million doubles per second and I have to write it to a file continuously for hours

                          actually stop right here!

                          if this program is used more than once, you're going to destroy your HD/SSD very quickly!

                          I'm sure there's an other - in memory - way to hand over those data points


                          Be aware of the Qt Code of Conduct, when posting : https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct


                          Q: What's that?
                          A: It's blue light.
                          Q: What does it do?
                          A: It turns blue.

                          CJhaC 1 Reply Last reply
                          1
                          • CJhaC Offline
                            CJhaC Offline
                            CJha
                            wrote on last edited by
                            #20

                            @JonB @jsulm Matlab supports the binary format. There are functions such as fopen, fread, fseek etc. to read and write binary files. I have read binary file written using QDataStream in Matlab using fread and so on

                            jsulmJ 1 Reply Last reply
                            0
                            • CJhaC CJha

                              @JonB @jsulm Matlab supports the binary format. There are functions such as fopen, fread, fseek etc. to read and write binary files. I have read binary file written using QDataStream in Matlab using fread and so on

                              jsulmJ Offline
                              jsulmJ Offline
                              jsulm
                              Lifetime Qt Champion
                              wrote on last edited by
                              #21

                              @CJha said in How to write entire QVector to a binary file?:

                              Matlab supports the binary format

                              Do you have its specification?

                              https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct

                              CJhaC 1 Reply Last reply
                              0
                              • J.HilkJ J.Hilk

                                @CJha said in How to write entire QVector to a binary file?:

                                I am gathering data at a much faster rate, up to 1 million doubles per second and I have to write it to a file continuously for hours

                                actually stop right here!

                                if this program is used more than once, you're going to destroy your HD/SSD very quickly!

                                I'm sure there's an other - in memory - way to hand over those data points

                                CJhaC Offline
                                CJhaC Offline
                                CJha
                                wrote on last edited by
                                #22

                                @J-Hilk I am not sure what you mean by

                                if this program is used more than once, you're going to destroy your HD/SSD very quickly!

                                Given that 1 million doubles are 8 million bytes, I think modern processors and disk drives can handle such speed easily.

                                JonBJ J.HilkJ 2 Replies Last reply
                                0
                                • CJhaC CJha

                                  @J-Hilk I am not sure what you mean by

                                  if this program is used more than once, you're going to destroy your HD/SSD very quickly!

                                  Given that 1 million doubles are 8 million bytes, I think modern processors and disk drives can handle such speed easily.

                                  JonBJ Offline
                                  JonBJ Offline
                                  JonB
                                  wrote on last edited by JonB
                                  #23

                                  @CJha
                                  You may (well) know more than I, but can MatLab read and process 8MB of new data per second, at the same time as something else is producing it? And, separately, do you really generate 1 million new data points per second?

                                  Also, as @J-Hilk said, wouldn't sending a pipe stream (e.g. a socket?) be better than writing to file and reading back? Does Matlab accept incoming data elsewhere than in a file?

                                  CJhaC 1 Reply Last reply
                                  0
                                  • jsulmJ jsulm

                                    @CJha said in How to write entire QVector to a binary file?:

                                    Matlab supports the binary format

                                    Do you have its specification?

                                    CJhaC Offline
                                    CJhaC Offline
                                    CJha
                                    wrote on last edited by
                                    #24

                                    @jsulm It is highly compatible. Here are the links for fopen, fread, fseek. I all these I can specify the format, ByteOrder, size of data (such as int, double, etc), and quite a few other things.
                                    I don't think Matlab is the restrictive thing here, I can read any type of binary file in Matlab as long as I know how it is written.

                                    JonBJ 1 Reply Last reply
                                    0
                                    • CJhaC CJha

                                      @jsulm It is highly compatible. Here are the links for fopen, fread, fseek. I all these I can specify the format, ByteOrder, size of data (such as int, double, etc), and quite a few other things.
                                      I don't think Matlab is the restrictive thing here, I can read any type of binary file in Matlab as long as I know how it is written.

                                      JonBJ Offline
                                      JonBJ Offline
                                      JonB
                                      wrote on last edited by JonB
                                      #25

                                      @CJha
                                      The code to write a QVector to file in the way you want, as fast as possible in one blob not one-by-one, is given in e.g. https://www.qtcentre.org/threads/65713-Output-a-QVector-of-doubles-to-a-binary-file-(without-using-QDatastream)?p=289540#post289540 :

                                      qint64 bytesWritten = file.write(reinterpret_cast<const char*>(vec.constData()), sizeof(double) * vec.size());
                                      

                                      EDIT I think you will want reinterpret_cast<> rather than static_cast<> here as shown in that post, so I have altered the code line to use that.

                                      CJhaC 1 Reply Last reply
                                      4
                                      • JonBJ JonB

                                        @CJha
                                        You may (well) know more than I, but can MatLab read and process 8MB of new data per second, at the same time as something else is producing it? And, separately, do you really generate 1 million new data points per second?

                                        Also, as @J-Hilk said, wouldn't sending a pipe stream (e.g. a socket?) be better than writing to file and reading back? Does Matlab accept incoming data elsewhere than in a file?

                                        CJhaC Offline
                                        CJhaC Offline
                                        CJha
                                        wrote on last edited by
                                        #26

                                        @JonB No, Matlab is going to read it at a later time. When data is being generated it is just stored in a binary file for later use by Matlab. And yes, Matlab is slower but it doesn't matter if it takes 1 second or 1 day to read the file as the researchers can just start loading the file in the night and come back in the morning to work on it (many researchers wait for times like 24 to 36 hours for files to get processed).

                                        And yes, I am generating data at 1 million doubles per second. I am using National Instruments and Measurement Computing DAQ boards, controlling both through Qt and C++ and these boards are capable of generating 1 million doubles per second.

                                        1 Reply Last reply
                                        1
                                        • CJhaC CJha

                                          @J-Hilk I am not sure what you mean by

                                          if this program is used more than once, you're going to destroy your HD/SSD very quickly!

                                          Given that 1 million doubles are 8 million bytes, I think modern processors and disk drives can handle such speed easily.

                                          J.HilkJ Offline
                                          J.HilkJ Offline
                                          J.Hilk
                                          Moderators
                                          wrote on last edited by J.Hilk
                                          #27

                                          @CJha said in How to write entire QVector to a binary file?:

                                          @J-Hilk I am not sure what you mean by

                                          if this program is used more than once, you're going to destroy your HD/SSD very quickly!

                                          Given that 1 million doubles are 8 million bytes, I think modern processors and disk drives can handle such speed easily.

                                          its not about the speed, its about the amount of times written into the cell, Samsung for examples says their ssd's are "built to handle 150 terabytes written" with, lets say 1 million points of double (8 bytes each) per second would mean your ssd is done for in roughly 200 days, instead of the approximated 10 years.

                                          also you have to coordinate read and write access of the file, so that Matlab and your Qt Programm to not try to access the file at the same time with potential data loss etc


                                          Be aware of the Qt Code of Conduct, when posting : https://forum.qt.io/topic/113070/qt-code-of-conduct


                                          Q: What's that?
                                          A: It's blue light.
                                          Q: What does it do?
                                          A: It turns blue.

                                          CJhaC 1 Reply Last reply
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