fgets
Defined in header <stdio.h>
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char *fgets( char *str, int count, FILE *stream ); |
(until C99) | |
char *fgets( char *restrict str, int count, FILE *restrict stream ); |
(since C99) | |
Reads at most count - 1 characters from the given file stream and stores them in the character array pointed to by str
. Parsing stops if a newline character is found, in which case str
will contain that newline character, or if end-of-file occurs. If bytes are read and no errors occur, writes a null character at the position immediately after the last character written to str
.
Contents |
[edit] Parameters
str | - | pointer to an element of a char array |
count | - | maximum number of characters to write (typically the length of str )
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stream | - | file stream to read the data from |
[edit] Return value
str
on success, null pointer on failure.
If the end-of-file condition is encountered, sets the eof indicator on stream
(see feof()). This is only a failure if it causes no bytes to be read, in which case a null pointer is returned and the contents of the array pointed to by str
are not altered (i.e. the first byte is not overwritten with a null character).
If the failure has been caused by some other error, sets the error indicator (see ferror()) on stream
. The contents of the array pointed to by str
are indeterminate (it may not even be null-terminated).
[edit] Notes
POSIX additionally requires that fgets sets errno if a read error occurs.
Although the standard specification is unclear in the cases where count<=1, common implementations do
- if count < 1, do nothing, report error
- if count == 1,
- some implementations do nothing, report error,
- others read nothing, store zero in str[0], report success
[edit] Example
#include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> int main(void) { FILE* tmpf = tmpfile(); fputs("Alan Turing\n", tmpf); fputs("John von Neumann\n", tmpf); fputs("Alonzo Church\n", tmpf); rewind(tmpf); char buf[8]; while (fgets(buf, sizeof buf, tmpf) != NULL) printf("\"%s\"\n", buf); if (feof(tmpf)) puts("End of file reached"); }
Output:
"Alan Tu" "ring " "John vo" "n Neuma" "nn " "Alonzo " "Church " End of file reached
[edit] References
- C17 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2018):
- 7.21.7.2 The fgets function (p: 241)
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
- 7.21.7.2 The fgets function (p: 331)
- C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1999):
- 7.19.7.2 The fgets function (p: 296)
- C89/C90 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990):
- 4.9.7.2 The fgets function
[edit] See also
(C11)(C11)(C11) |
reads formatted input from stdin, a file stream or a buffer (function) |
(removed in C11)(C11) |
reads a character string from stdin (function) |
writes a character string to a file stream (function) | |
(dynamic memory TR) |
read from a stream into a automatically resized buffer until delimiter/end of line (function) |
C++ documentation for fgets
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