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fgets()
Read a string of characters from a stream
Synopsis:
#include <stdio.h>
char* fgets( char* buf,
size_t n,
FILE* fp );
Arguments:
- buf
- A pointer to a buffer in which fgets() can store the characters that it reads.
- n
- The maximum number of characters to read.
- fp
- The stream from which to read the characters.
Library:
libc
Use the -l c option to qcc to link against this library. This library is usually included automatically.
Description:
The fgets() function reads a string of characters from the stream specified by fp, and stores them in the array specified by buf.
It stops reading characters when:
- the end-of-file is reached
Or:
- a newline ('\n') character is read
Or:
- n-1 characters have been read.
The newline character isn't discarded. A null character is placed immediately after the last character read into the array.
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Don't assume that there's a newline character in every string that you
read with fgets().
A newline character isn't present if there are more than
n-1 characters before the newline.
Also, a newline character might not appear as the last character in a file when the end-of-file is reached. |
Returns:
The same pointer as buf, or NULL if the stream is at the end-of-file or an error occurs (errno is set).
Examples:
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
int main( void )
{
FILE *fp;
char buffer[80];
fp = fopen( "file", "r" );
if( fp != NULL ) {
while( fgets( buffer, 80, fp ) != NULL ) {
fputs( buffer, stdout );
}
fclose( fp );
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
return EXIT_FAILURE;
}
Classification:
| Safety: | |
|---|---|
| Cancellation point | Yes |
| Interrupt handler | No |
| Signal handler | No |
| Thread | Yes |
See also:
errno, feof(), ferror(), fopen(), fputs(), getc(), gets(), fgetc()
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