How to increase BufferHeight property










-1














I have a text file with 1000 lines inside my project but it starts reading from line 703 up to 1000.



What has been gone wrong? Normally it should read all lines.



using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Text;

namespace ConsoleApp1

class Program

static void Main(string args)

int b = 0;
string lines = File.ReadAllLines(@"C:UsersblablasourcereposConsoleApp1DEV-data.txt");

int subString = 0;

foreach (string l in lines)

b++;
Console.WriteLine(b+" Line "+l);


// Keep the console window open in debug mode.
Console.WriteLine("Press any key to exit.");
System.Console.ReadKey();





Based on the comments, i will need to increase the BufferSize property of the console.



public static int BufferHeight get; set; 


How can i increase the BufferHeight property so my console can be able to print all 1000 lines?










share|improve this question



















  • 1




    What happens when you step through your code? What are you observing?
    – rory.ap
    Nov 12 at 12:29










  • Well it outputs 297 lines and not 1000
    – Gragas Incoming
    Nov 12 at 12:31






  • 5




    Is it that you only see 297 lines since the console buffer can only show the latest 297 lines?
    – Sani Singh Huttunen
    Nov 12 at 12:32










  • Check the value of Console.BufferHeight - console windows have vertical and horizontal buffers, so it might be that it's printing all 1000 lines, but you are only able to scroll up to line 703 due to the buffer.
    – Diado
    Nov 12 at 12:33






  • 1




    I'm not asking what it outputs. What happens when you step through the code line by line and look at the variables, look at where the program flow is going? For instance, you assign 0 to b...are you saying the first thing you see is 297? Watch the value of b and see what's actually going on.
    – rory.ap
    Nov 12 at 12:33















-1














I have a text file with 1000 lines inside my project but it starts reading from line 703 up to 1000.



What has been gone wrong? Normally it should read all lines.



using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Text;

namespace ConsoleApp1

class Program

static void Main(string args)

int b = 0;
string lines = File.ReadAllLines(@"C:UsersblablasourcereposConsoleApp1DEV-data.txt");

int subString = 0;

foreach (string l in lines)

b++;
Console.WriteLine(b+" Line "+l);


// Keep the console window open in debug mode.
Console.WriteLine("Press any key to exit.");
System.Console.ReadKey();





Based on the comments, i will need to increase the BufferSize property of the console.



public static int BufferHeight get; set; 


How can i increase the BufferHeight property so my console can be able to print all 1000 lines?










share|improve this question



















  • 1




    What happens when you step through your code? What are you observing?
    – rory.ap
    Nov 12 at 12:29










  • Well it outputs 297 lines and not 1000
    – Gragas Incoming
    Nov 12 at 12:31






  • 5




    Is it that you only see 297 lines since the console buffer can only show the latest 297 lines?
    – Sani Singh Huttunen
    Nov 12 at 12:32










  • Check the value of Console.BufferHeight - console windows have vertical and horizontal buffers, so it might be that it's printing all 1000 lines, but you are only able to scroll up to line 703 due to the buffer.
    – Diado
    Nov 12 at 12:33






  • 1




    I'm not asking what it outputs. What happens when you step through the code line by line and look at the variables, look at where the program flow is going? For instance, you assign 0 to b...are you saying the first thing you see is 297? Watch the value of b and see what's actually going on.
    – rory.ap
    Nov 12 at 12:33













-1












-1








-1


1





I have a text file with 1000 lines inside my project but it starts reading from line 703 up to 1000.



What has been gone wrong? Normally it should read all lines.



using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Text;

namespace ConsoleApp1

class Program

static void Main(string args)

int b = 0;
string lines = File.ReadAllLines(@"C:UsersblablasourcereposConsoleApp1DEV-data.txt");

int subString = 0;

foreach (string l in lines)

b++;
Console.WriteLine(b+" Line "+l);


// Keep the console window open in debug mode.
Console.WriteLine("Press any key to exit.");
System.Console.ReadKey();





Based on the comments, i will need to increase the BufferSize property of the console.



public static int BufferHeight get; set; 


How can i increase the BufferHeight property so my console can be able to print all 1000 lines?










share|improve this question















I have a text file with 1000 lines inside my project but it starts reading from line 703 up to 1000.



What has been gone wrong? Normally it should read all lines.



using System;
using System.IO;
using System.Text;

namespace ConsoleApp1

class Program

static void Main(string args)

int b = 0;
string lines = File.ReadAllLines(@"C:UsersblablasourcereposConsoleApp1DEV-data.txt");

int subString = 0;

foreach (string l in lines)

b++;
Console.WriteLine(b+" Line "+l);


// Keep the console window open in debug mode.
Console.WriteLine("Press any key to exit.");
System.Console.ReadKey();





Based on the comments, i will need to increase the BufferSize property of the console.



public static int BufferHeight get; set; 


How can i increase the BufferHeight property so my console can be able to print all 1000 lines?







c#






share|improve this question















share|improve this question













share|improve this question




share|improve this question








edited Nov 12 at 13:10









Patrick Hofman

125k18170224




125k18170224










asked Nov 12 at 12:27









Gragas Incoming

26813




26813







  • 1




    What happens when you step through your code? What are you observing?
    – rory.ap
    Nov 12 at 12:29










  • Well it outputs 297 lines and not 1000
    – Gragas Incoming
    Nov 12 at 12:31






  • 5




    Is it that you only see 297 lines since the console buffer can only show the latest 297 lines?
    – Sani Singh Huttunen
    Nov 12 at 12:32










  • Check the value of Console.BufferHeight - console windows have vertical and horizontal buffers, so it might be that it's printing all 1000 lines, but you are only able to scroll up to line 703 due to the buffer.
    – Diado
    Nov 12 at 12:33






  • 1




    I'm not asking what it outputs. What happens when you step through the code line by line and look at the variables, look at where the program flow is going? For instance, you assign 0 to b...are you saying the first thing you see is 297? Watch the value of b and see what's actually going on.
    – rory.ap
    Nov 12 at 12:33












  • 1




    What happens when you step through your code? What are you observing?
    – rory.ap
    Nov 12 at 12:29










  • Well it outputs 297 lines and not 1000
    – Gragas Incoming
    Nov 12 at 12:31






  • 5




    Is it that you only see 297 lines since the console buffer can only show the latest 297 lines?
    – Sani Singh Huttunen
    Nov 12 at 12:32










  • Check the value of Console.BufferHeight - console windows have vertical and horizontal buffers, so it might be that it's printing all 1000 lines, but you are only able to scroll up to line 703 due to the buffer.
    – Diado
    Nov 12 at 12:33






  • 1




    I'm not asking what it outputs. What happens when you step through the code line by line and look at the variables, look at where the program flow is going? For instance, you assign 0 to b...are you saying the first thing you see is 297? Watch the value of b and see what's actually going on.
    – rory.ap
    Nov 12 at 12:33







1




1




What happens when you step through your code? What are you observing?
– rory.ap
Nov 12 at 12:29




What happens when you step through your code? What are you observing?
– rory.ap
Nov 12 at 12:29












Well it outputs 297 lines and not 1000
– Gragas Incoming
Nov 12 at 12:31




Well it outputs 297 lines and not 1000
– Gragas Incoming
Nov 12 at 12:31




5




5




Is it that you only see 297 lines since the console buffer can only show the latest 297 lines?
– Sani Singh Huttunen
Nov 12 at 12:32




Is it that you only see 297 lines since the console buffer can only show the latest 297 lines?
– Sani Singh Huttunen
Nov 12 at 12:32












Check the value of Console.BufferHeight - console windows have vertical and horizontal buffers, so it might be that it's printing all 1000 lines, but you are only able to scroll up to line 703 due to the buffer.
– Diado
Nov 12 at 12:33




Check the value of Console.BufferHeight - console windows have vertical and horizontal buffers, so it might be that it's printing all 1000 lines, but you are only able to scroll up to line 703 due to the buffer.
– Diado
Nov 12 at 12:33




1




1




I'm not asking what it outputs. What happens when you step through the code line by line and look at the variables, look at where the program flow is going? For instance, you assign 0 to b...are you saying the first thing you see is 297? Watch the value of b and see what's actually going on.
– rory.ap
Nov 12 at 12:33




I'm not asking what it outputs. What happens when you step through the code line by line and look at the variables, look at where the program flow is going? For instance, you assign 0 to b...are you saying the first thing you see is 297? Watch the value of b and see what's actually going on.
– rory.ap
Nov 12 at 12:33












1 Answer
1






active

oldest

votes


















2














The default for BufferHeight and BufferWidth are 300 rows and 85 columns respectively. This indicates that you indeed need to increase the Console.BufferHeight property and set it to greater than 1000.



Max value for BufferHeight is Int16.MaxValue - 1.



...
Console.BufferHeight = 1200;

foreach (string l in lines)

b++;
Console.WriteLine(b+" Line "+l);

...





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    1 Answer
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    active

    oldest

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    1 Answer
    1






    active

    oldest

    votes









    active

    oldest

    votes






    active

    oldest

    votes









    2














    The default for BufferHeight and BufferWidth are 300 rows and 85 columns respectively. This indicates that you indeed need to increase the Console.BufferHeight property and set it to greater than 1000.



    Max value for BufferHeight is Int16.MaxValue - 1.



    ...
    Console.BufferHeight = 1200;

    foreach (string l in lines)

    b++;
    Console.WriteLine(b+" Line "+l);

    ...





    share|improve this answer

























      2














      The default for BufferHeight and BufferWidth are 300 rows and 85 columns respectively. This indicates that you indeed need to increase the Console.BufferHeight property and set it to greater than 1000.



      Max value for BufferHeight is Int16.MaxValue - 1.



      ...
      Console.BufferHeight = 1200;

      foreach (string l in lines)

      b++;
      Console.WriteLine(b+" Line "+l);

      ...





      share|improve this answer























        2












        2








        2






        The default for BufferHeight and BufferWidth are 300 rows and 85 columns respectively. This indicates that you indeed need to increase the Console.BufferHeight property and set it to greater than 1000.



        Max value for BufferHeight is Int16.MaxValue - 1.



        ...
        Console.BufferHeight = 1200;

        foreach (string l in lines)

        b++;
        Console.WriteLine(b+" Line "+l);

        ...





        share|improve this answer












        The default for BufferHeight and BufferWidth are 300 rows and 85 columns respectively. This indicates that you indeed need to increase the Console.BufferHeight property and set it to greater than 1000.



        Max value for BufferHeight is Int16.MaxValue - 1.



        ...
        Console.BufferHeight = 1200;

        foreach (string l in lines)

        b++;
        Console.WriteLine(b+" Line "+l);

        ...






        share|improve this answer












        share|improve this answer



        share|improve this answer










        answered Nov 12 at 12:47









        Sani Singh Huttunen

        18.6k25264




        18.6k25264



























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