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You're reading from  Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity - Seventh Edition

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Published inNov 2022
Reading LevelBeginner
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781837636877
Edition7th Edition
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Harrison Ferrone
Harrison Ferrone
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Harrison Ferrone

Harrison Ferrone is an instructional content creator for LinkedIn Learning and Pluralsight, tech editor for the Ray Wenderlich website, and used to write technical documentation on the Mixed Reality team at Microsoft. He is a graduate of the University of Colorado at Boulder and Columbia College, Chicago. After a few years as an iOS developer at small start-ups, and one Fortune 500 company, he fell into a teaching career and never looked back.
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Working with streams

So far, we’ve been letting the File class do all of the heavy lifting with our data. What we haven’t talked about is how the File class, or any other class that deals with reading and writing data, does that work under the hood.

For computers, data is made up of bytes. Think of bytes as the computer’s atoms; they make up everything—there’s even a C# byte type. When we read, write, or update a file, our data is converted into an array of bytes, which are then streamed to or from the file using a Stream object. The data stream is responsible for carrying the data as a sequence of bytes to or from a file, acting as a translator or intermediary for us between our game application and the data files themselves.

Figure 12.11: Diagram of streaming data to a file

The File class uses Stream objects for us automatically, and there are different Stream subclasses for different functionality:

  • Use a FileStream...
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Learning C# by Developing Games with Unity - Seventh Edition
Published in: Nov 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781837636877

Author (1)

author image
Harrison Ferrone

Harrison Ferrone is an instructional content creator for LinkedIn Learning and Pluralsight, tech editor for the Ray Wenderlich website, and used to write technical documentation on the Mixed Reality team at Microsoft. He is a graduate of the University of Colorado at Boulder and Columbia College, Chicago. After a few years as an iOS developer at small start-ups, and one Fortune 500 company, he fell into a teaching career and never looked back.
Read more about Harrison Ferrone