首页IT科技reflect的用法及短语(C File I/O Tutorial Cprogramming.com)

reflect的用法及短语(C File I/O Tutorial Cprogramming.com)

时间2025-05-03 02:25:49分类IT科技浏览4265
导读:C File I/O and Binary File I/O...

C File I/O and Binary File I/O

By Alex Allain

In this tutorial, youll learn how to do file IO, text and binary, in C, using fopen, fwrite, and fread, fprintf, fscanf, fgetc and fputc.

FILE *

For C File I/O you need to use a FILE pointer, which will let the program

keep track of the file being accessed. (You can think of it as the memory

address of the file or the location of the file).

For example:

FILE *fp;

fopen

To open a file you need to use the fopen function, which returns

a FILE pointer. Once youve opened a file, you can use the FILE

pointer to let the compiler perform input and output functions on

the file.

FILE *fopen(const char *filename, const char *mode);

In the filename, if you use a string literal as the argument,

you need to remember to use double backslashes rather than a

single backslash as you otherwise risk an escape character such

as \t. Using double backslashes \\ escapes the \ key, so the

string works as it is expected. Your users, of course, do not

need to do this! Its just the way quoted strings are handled

in C and C++.

fopen modes

The allowed modes for fopen are as follows:

r - open for reading

w - open for writing (file need not exist)

a - open for appending (file need not exist)

r+ - open for reading and writing, start at beginning

w+ - open for reading and writing (overwrite file)

a+ - open for reading and writing (append if file exists)

Note that its possible for fopen to fail even if your program is

perfectly correct: you might try to open a file specified by the

user, and that file might not exist (or it might be

write-protected). In those cases, fopen will return 0, the NULL

pointer.

Heres a simple example of using fopen:

FILE *fp;

fp=fopen("c:\\test.txt", "r");

This code will open test.txt for reading in text mode. To open a

file in a binary mode you must add a b to the end of the mode string;

for example, "rb" (for the reading and writing modes,

you can add the b either after the plus sign - "r+b" -

or before - "rb+")

fclose

When youre done working with a file, you should close it using the function

int fclose(FILE *a_file);

fclose returns zero if the file is closed successfully.

An example of fclose is

fclose(fp);

Reading and writing with fprintf, fscanf fputc, and fgetc

To work with text input and output, you use fprintf and fscanf,

both of which are similar to their friends printf and scanf

except that you must pass the FILE pointer as first argument.

For example:

FILE *fp;

fp=fopen("c:\\test.txt", "w");

fprintf(fp, "Testing...\n");

It is also possible to read (or write) a single character at a time--this can

be useful if you wish to perform character-by-character input (for instance,

if you need to keep track of every piece of punctuation in a file it would

make more sense to read in a single character than to read in a string at a

time.) The fgetc function, which takes a file pointer, and returns an int,

will let you read a single character from a file:

int fgetc (FILE *fp);

Notice that fgetc returns an int. What this actually means is that when it

reads a normal character in the file, it will return a value suitable for

storing in an unsigned char (basically, a number in the range 0 to 255). On

the other hand, when youre at the very end of the file, you cant get a

character value--in this case, fgetc will return "EOF", which is a constant that

indicates that youve reached the end of the file. To see a full example

using fgetc in practice, take a look at the example here.

The fputc function allows you to write a character at a time--you might find

this useful if you wanted to copy a file character by character. It looks

like this:

int fputc( int c, FILE *fp );

Note that the first argument should be in the range of an unsigned char so

that it is a valid character. The second argument is the file to write to.

On success, fputc will return the value c, and on failure, it will return EOF.

Binary file I/O - fread and fwrite

For binary File I/O you use fread and fwrite.

The declarations for each are similar:

size_t fread(void *ptr, size_t size_of_elements, size_t number_of_elements, FILE *a_file);

size_t fwrite(const void *ptr, size_t size_of_elements, size_t number_of_elements, FILE *a_file);

Both of these functions deal with blocks of memories - usually

arrays. Because they accept pointers, you can also use these

functions with other data structures; you can even write structs

to a file or a read struct into memory.

Lets look at one function to see how the notation works.

fread takes four arguments. Dont by confused by the declaration

of a void *ptr; void means that it is a pointer that can be used

for any type variable. The first argument is the name of the array

or the address of the structure you want to write to the file. The

second argument is the size of each element of the array; it is

in bytes. For example, if you have an array of characters, you would

want to read it in one byte chunks, so size_of_elements is one.

You can use the sizeof operator to get the size of the various datatypes;

for example, if you have a variable int x; you can get the size

of x with sizeof(x);. This usage works even for structs or arrays.

E.g., if you have a variable of a struct type with the name a_struct,

you can use sizeof(a_struct) to find out how much memory it is taking

up.

e.g.,

sizeof(int);

The third argument is simply how many elements you want to read

or write; for example, if you pass a 100 element array, you want

to read no more than 100 elements, so you pass in 100.

The final argument is simply the file pointer weve been using.

When fread is used, after being passed an array, fread will read

from the file until it has filled the array, and it will return

the number of elements actually read. If the file, for example,

is only 30 bytes, but you try to read 100 bytes, it will return

that it read 30 bytes. To check to ensure the end of file was reached,

use the feof function, which accepts a FILE pointer and returns

true if the end of the file has been reached.

fwrite is similar in usage, except instead of reading into the memory

you write from memory into a file.

For example,

FILE *fp;

fp=fopen("c:\\test.bin", "wb");

char x[10]="ABCDEFGHIJ";

fwrite(x, sizeof(x[0]), sizeof(x)/sizeof(x[0]), fp);

创心域SEO版权声明:以上内容作者已申请原创保护,未经允许不得转载,侵权必究!授权事宜、对本内容有异议或投诉,敬请联系网站管理员,我们将尽快回复您,谢谢合作!

展开全文READ MORE
二叉树左右子树交换利用什么遍历算法(二叉树交换左右子树递归以及非递归算法) windows安装hadoop教程(Windows 10 安装 Hadoop 2.10的过程总结)