The C programming language provides many standard library functions for file input and output. These functions make up the bulk of the C standard library header <stdio.h>. The functionality descends from a "portable I/O package" written by Mike Lesk at Bell Labs in the early 1970s, and officially became part of the Unix operating system in Version 7.

The I/O functionality of C is fairly low-level by modern standards; C abstracts all file operations into operations on streams of bytes, which may be "input streams" or "output streams". Unlike some earlier programming languages, C has no direct support for random-access data files; to read from a record in the middle of a file, the programmer must create a stream, seek to the middle of the file, and then read bytes in sequence from the stream.

The stream model of file I/O was popularized by Unix, which was developed concurrently with the C programming language itself. The vast majority of modern operating systems have inherited streams from Unix, and many languages in the C programming language family have inherited C's file I/O interface with few if any changes (for example, PHP).

Overview

This library uses what are called streams to operate with physical devices such as keyboards, printers, terminals or with any other type of files supported by the system. Streams are an abstraction to interact with these in a uniform way. All streams have similar properties independent of the individual characteristics of the physical media they are associated with.

Functions

Most of the C file input/output functions are defined in <stdio.h> (or in the C++ header <cstdio>, which contains the standard C functionality but in the std namespace).

Byte characterWide characterDescription
File accessOpens a file (with a non-Unicode filename on Windows and possible UTF-8 filename on Linux)
opens a process by creating a pipe, forking, and invoking the shell
Opens a different file with an existing stream
Synchronizes an output stream with the actual file
Closes a file
closes a stream
Sets the buffer for a file stream
Sets the buffer and its size for a file stream
Switches a file stream between wide-character I/O and narrow-character I/O
Direct input/outputReads from a file
Writes to a file
Unformatted input/outputReads a byte/wchar_t from a file stream
Reads a byte/wchar_t line from a file stream
Writes a byte/wchar_t to a file stream
Writes a byte/wchar_t string to a file stream
Reads a byte/wchar_t from stdin
—N/aReads a byte string from stdin until a newline or end of file is encountered (deprecated in C99, removed from C11)
Writes a byte/wchar_t to stdout
—N/aWrites a byte string to stdout
Puts a byte/wchar_t back into a file stream
Formatted input/outputReads formatted byte/wchar_t input from stdin, a file stream or a buffer
Reads formatted input byte/wchar_t from stdin, a file stream or a buffer using variable argument list
Prints formatted byte/wchar_t output to stdout, a file stream or a buffer
Prints formatted byte/wchar_t output to stdout, a file stream, or a buffer using variable argument list
—N/aWrites a description of the current error to stderr
File positioningftelloReturns the current file position indicator
fseekoMoves the file position indicator to a specific location in a file
Gets the file position indicator
Moves the file position indicator to a specific location in a file
Moves the file position indicator to the beginning in a file
Error handlingClears errors
Checks for the end-of-file
Checks for a file error
Operations on filesErases a file
Renames a file
Returns a pointer to a temporary file
Returns a unique filename

Constants

Constants defined in the <stdio.h> header include:

NameNotes
EOFA negative integer of type int used to indicate end-of-file conditions
An integer which is the size of the buffer used by the setbuf() function
FILENAME_MAXThe size of a char array which is large enough to store the name of any file that can be opened
FOPEN_MAXThe number of files that may be open simultaneously; will be at least eight
_IOFBFAn abbreviation for "input/output fully buffered"; it is an integer which may be passed to the setvbuf() function to request block buffered input and output for an open stream
_IOLBFAn abbreviation for "input/output line buffered"; it is an integer which may be passed to the setvbuf() function to request line buffered input and output for an open stream
_IONBFAn abbreviation for "input/output not buffered"; it is an integer which may be passed to the setvbuf() function to request unbuffered input and output for an open stream
L_tmpnamThe size of a char array which is large enough to store a temporary filename generated by the tmpnam() function
NULLA macro expanding to the null pointer constant; that is, a constant representing a pointer value which is guaranteed not to be a valid address of an object in memory
SEEK_CURAn integer which may be passed to the fseek() function to request positioning relative to the current file position
SEEK_ENDAn integer which may be passed to the fseek() function to request positioning relative to the end of the file
SEEK_SETAn integer which may be passed to the fseek() function to request positioning relative to the beginning of the file
TMP_MAXThe maximum number of unique filenames generable by the tmpnam() function; will be at least 25

Variables

Variables defined in the <stdio.h> header include:

NameNotes
stdinA pointer to a FILE which refers to the standard input stream, usually a keyboard.
stdoutA pointer to a FILE which refers to the standard output stream, usually a display terminal.
stderrA pointer to a FILE which refers to the standard error stream, often a display terminal.

Member types

Data types defined in the <stdio.h> header include:

  • – also known as a file handle or a FILE pointer, this is an opaque pointer containing the information about a file or text stream needed to perform input or output operations on it, including: platform-specific identifier of the associated I/O device, such as a file descriptor the buffer stream orientation indicator (unset, narrow, or wide) stream buffering state indicator (unbuffered, line buffered, fully buffered) I/O mode indicator (input stream, output stream, or update stream) binary/text mode indicator end-of-file indicator error indicator the current stream position and multibyte conversion state (an object of type mbstate_t) reentrant lock (required as of C11)
  • fpos_t – a non-array type capable of uniquely identifying the position of every byte in a file and every conversion state that can occur in all supported multibyte character encodings
  • size_t – an unsigned integer type which is the type of the result of the sizeof operator.

Extensions

The POSIX standard defines several extensions to <stdio.h> in its Base Definitions, among which are a readline function that allocates memory, the fileno and fdopen functions that establish the link between FILE objects and file descriptors, and a group of functions for creating FILE objects that refer to in-memory buffers.

Example

The following C program opens a binary file called myfile.bin, reads five bytes from it, and then closes the file.

Alternatives to stdio

Several alternatives to <stdio.h> have been developed. Among these are C++ I/O headers <iostream> and <print>, part of the C++ Standard Library. ISO C++ still requires the <stdio.h> functionality, and it is found under header <cstdio>.

Other alternatives include the Sfio (A Safe/Fast I/O Library) library from AT&T Bell Laboratories. This library, introduced in 1991, aimed to avoid inconsistencies, unsafe practices and inefficiencies in the design of <stdio.h>. Among its features is the possibility to insert callback functions into a stream to customize the handling of data read from or written to the stream. It was released to the outside world in 1997, and the last official stable release was 2005-02-01

See also

External links

  • Media related to C file input/output at Wikimedia Commons