No, it's just not especially efficient to do unbuffered disk reads/writes. Of course if you're using a class which buffers the reads/writes for you I don't see what's wrong with that.
An algorithm capable of compressing large amounts of data would read in a few blocks at a time, process those, and write blocks to disk as necessary.
Finding a nice balance where the process isn't too I/O bound ideally.
But if you're using a high level language like C# or Java, you can just ignore that part most of the time and use a BufferedStream of some sort. I don't recall how C++ I/O works exactly which is what I presume you're using.
Anyhow, I've been delegated some housework... Hooray.
@moot - you mentioned the bit about 9 vs 255 earlier. My friend pointed out that we were using an int as the counter. Char does just as well and limits to 255 instead of 9.
When I use an int for my counter in the decoder, it decodes properly but won't decode numbers. But, when I use a char, it gets the numbers and spacing all wrong.
I'm just wondering where the spacing is all wrong. If it's in the encoded document, that's expected because if you open up a file containing char < 23 you have funky control codes in it.
I'm considering getting off of my rumpus and taking the train to school even though I have no class today to ask the chairman what this assignment is all about.
@balpha oh, sorry. I mean the imperial year 793, 3 fifths and 9!
I would love for the old, pre-1972 pound to still be around, though. That had a certain charm to it. Although I would probably never have understood how it works.