This is an very old thread; however, I just stumbled on a similar problem. A flat file with a number of different record "formats" inside. Many different formats, not in any particular order, meaning you might have 57 fields in one line, then 59 in the next 1000, then 56 in the next 10000, back to 57... well, think you got the idea.
For lack of better ideas, I decided to break that file based on the number of commas in each line, and then import the different record types (now bunched together) using SSIS packages for each type.
So the answer for this question is there, with a bit more code to produce the files.
Hope this helps somebody with the same problem.
using System;
using System.Collections.Generic;
using System.Linq;
using System.Text;
using System.IO;
namespace OddFlatFile_Transformation
{
class RedistributeLines
{
/*
* This routine opens a text file and reads it line by line
* for each line the number of "," (commas) is counted
* and then the line is written into a another text file
* based on that number of commas found
* For example if there are 15 commas in a given line
* the line is written to the WhateverFileName_15.Ext
* WhaeverFileName and Ext are the same file name and
* extension from the original file that is being read
* The application tests WhateverFileName_NN.Ext for existance
* and creates the file in case it does not exist yet
* To Better control splited records a sequential identifier,
* based on the number of lines read, is added to the beginning
* of each line written independently of the file and record number
*/
static void Main(string[] args)
{
// get full qualified file name from console
String strFileToRead;
strFileToRead = Console.ReadLine();
// create reader & open file
StreamReader srTextFileReader = new StreamReader(strFileToRead);
string strLineRead = "";
string strFileToWrite = "";
string strLineIdentifier = "";
string strLineToWrite = "";
int intCountLines = 0;
int intCountCommas = 0;
int intDotPosition = 0;
const string strZeroPadding = "00000000";
// Processing begins
Console.WriteLine("Processing begins: " + DateTime.Now);
/* Main Loop */
while (strLineRead != null)
{
// read a line of text count commas and create Linde Identifier
strLineRead = srTextFileReader.ReadLine();
if (strLineRead != null)
{
intCountLines += 1;
strLineIdentifier = strZeroPadding.Substring(0, strZeroPadding.Length - intCountLines.ToString().Length) + intCountLines;
intCountCommas = 0;
foreach (char chrEachPosition in strLineRead)
{
if (chrEachPosition == ',') intCountCommas++;
}
// Based on the number of commas determined above
// the name of the file to be writen to is established
intDotPosition = strFileToRead.IndexOf(".");
strFileToWrite = strFileToRead.Substring (0,intDotPosition) + "_";
if ( intCountCommas < 10)
{
strFileToWrite += "0" + intCountCommas;
}
else
{
strFileToWrite += intCountCommas;
}
strFileToWrite += strFileToRead.Substring(intDotPosition, (strFileToRead.Length - intDotPosition));
// Using the file name established above the line captured
// during the text read phase is written to that file
StreamWriter swTextFileWriter = new StreamWriter(strFileToWrite, true);
strLineToWrite = "[" + strLineIdentifier + "] " + strLineRead;
swTextFileWriter.WriteLine (strLineToWrite);
swTextFileWriter.Close();
Console.WriteLine(strLineIdentifier);
}
}
// close the stream
srTextFileReader.Close();
Console.WriteLine(DateTime.Now);
Console.ReadLine();
}
}
}