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SYNOPSIS #include <stdio.h> FILE *fopen(const char *file, const char *mode); FILE *_fopen_r(void *reent, const char *file, const char *mode);
DESCRIPTION
fopen
initializes the data structures needed
to read or write a file. Specify the files name as the string at file,
and the kind of access you need to the file with the string at mode.
The alternate function, _fopen_r, is a reentrant version. The extra argument, reent, is a pointer to a reentrancy structure.
Three fundamental kinds of access are available: read, write, and append. *mode must begin with one of the three characters, r, w, or a, to select one of the following modes.
r
Open the file
for reading; the operation will fail if the file does not exist, or if
the host system does not permit you to read it.
w
Open the file
for writing from the beginning of the file: effectively, this always
creates a new file. If the file whose name you specified already existed,
its old contents are discarded.
Some host systems distinguish between binary and text files. Such systems may perform data transformations on data written to, or read from, files opened as text. If your system is one of these, then you can append a b to any of the three modes, to specify that you are opening the file as a binary file (the default is to open the file as a text file).
rb, then, means read binary; wb, write binary; ab, append binary.
To make C programs more portable, the b is accepted on all systems, whether or not it makes a difference.
Finally, you might need to both read and write from the same file. You can also append a + to any of the three modes, to permit this. (If you want to append both b and +, you can do it in either order: for example, rb+ means the same thing as r+b when used as a mode string.)
Use r+ (or rb+) to permit reading and writing anywhere in an existing file, without discarding any data; w+ (or wb+) to create a new file (or begin by discarding all data from an old one) that permits reading and writing anywhere in it; and a+ (or < 9c7 FONT FACE="Courier New">ab+) to permit reading anywhere in an existing file, but writing only at the end.
RETURNS
fopen
returns a file pointer which you can
use for other file operations, unless the file you requested could not
be opened; in that situation, the result is NULL.
If the reason for failure was an invalid string at mode,
errno
is set to EINVAL.
COMPLIANCE
fopen
is required by ANSI C.
Supporting OS subroutines required: close, fstat, isatty, lseek, open, read, sbrk, write.
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