FILE *out=fopen64("text.txt","w+");
unsigned int write;
char *outbuf=new char[write];
//fill outbuf
printf("%i\n",ftello64(out));
fwrite(outbuf,sizeof(char),write,out);
printf("%i\n",write);
printf("%i\n",ftello64(out));
output:
0
25755
25868
what is going on? write is set to 25755, and I tell fwrite to write that many bytes to a file, which is at the beginning, and then im at a position besides 25755?
If you are on a DOSish system (say, Windows) and the file is not opened in binary mode, line-endings will be converted automatically and each "line" will add one byte.
So, specify "wb"
as the mode rather than just "w"
as @caf points out. It will have no effect on Unix like platforms and will do the right thing on others.
For example:
#include <stdio.h>
#define LF 0x0a
int main(void) {
char x[] = { LF, LF };
FILE *out = fopen("test", "w");
printf("%d", ftell(out));
fwrite(x, 1, sizeof(x), out);
printf("%d", ftell(out));
fclose(out);
return 0;
}
C:\Temp> cl y.c Microsoft (R) 32-bit C/C++ Optimizing Compiler Version 15.00.21022.08 for 80x86 Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. y.c Microsoft (R) Incremental Linker Version 9.00.21022.08 Copyright (C) Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved. /out:y.exe C:\Temp> y.exe 04
/cygdrive/c/Temp $ gcc y.c -o y.exe /cygdrive/c/Temp $ ./y.exe 02