I have two questions about C's fread
function:
I have read that fread
is used to read a binary file. However, when I read a binary file with fgets
using read mode "r"
and a text file with fread
using "rb"
mode, the results are the same as reading a text file with fgets
and a binary file with fread
. So, why are there different functions for reading binary and text files?
I am using fread
to read 10 bytes of a file in one call. How should I stop reading at the end of file – i.e. how is EOF
specified in fread
?
answer of 1 question >
1>fread
size_t fread ( void * ptr, size_t size, size_t count, FILE * stream );
Read block of data from stream (try to understand this)
Reads an array of count elements, each one with a size of size bytes, from the stream and stores them in the block of memory specified by ptr. The postion indicator of the stream is advanced by the total amount of bytes read. The total amount of bytes read if successful is (size * count).
2>fgets
char * fgets ( char * str, int num, FILE * stream );
Get string from stream (try to understand this)
Reads characters from stream and stores them as a C string into str until (num-1) characters have been read or either a newline or a the End-of-File is reached, whichever comes first. A newline character makes fgets stop reading, but it is considered a valid character and therefore it is included in the string copied to str. A null character is automatically appended in str after the characters read to signal the end of the C string.
answer of 2nd question in fread return value is
The total number of elements successfully read is returned as a size_t object, which is an integral data type. If this number differs from the count parameter, either an error occured or the End Of File was reached.
You can use either ferror or feof to check whether an error happened or the End-of-File was reached.