std::fwrite
From cppreference.com
Defined in header
<cstdio>
|
||
std::size_t fwrite( const void* buffer, std::size_t size, std::size_t count, std::FILE* stream );
|
||
Writes up to count
binary objects from the given array buffer
to the output stream stream
. The objects are written as if by reinterepreting each object as an array of unsigned char and calling std::fputc size
times for each object to write those unsigned chars into stream
, in order. The file position indicator for the stream is advanced by the number of characters written.
If the objects are not TriviallyCopyable
, the behavior is undefined.
If an error occurs, the resulting value of the file position indicator for the stream is indeterminate.
Contents |
[edit] Parameters
buffer | - | pointer to the first object object in the array to be written |
size | - | size of each object |
count | - | the number of the objects to be written |
[edit] Return value
Number of objects written successfully, which may be less than count
if an error occurred.
If size
or count
is zero, fwrite
returns zero and performs no other action.
[edit] Example
Run this code
#include <cstdio> int main () { // write buffer to file std::FILE *f1; char buffer[] = { 'x' , 'y' , 'z' }; f1 = std::fopen("file.bin", "wb"); std::fwrite(buffer, sizeof(char), sizeof(buffer), f1); std::fclose(f1); // read the same data and print it to the standard output std::FILE *f2; char rbuf[10]; f2 = std::fopen("file.bin", "rb"); const char* res = std::fgets(rbuf, sizeof(rbuf), f2); std::fclose(f2); if (res) { // points to rbuf on read success, NULL on failure std::puts(res); } }
Output:
xyz
[edit] See also
(C++11)
|
prints formatted output to stdout, a file stream or a buffer (function) |
writes a character string to a file stream (function) |
|
reads from a file (function) |
|
C documentation for fwrite
|