Some of the functionality described on this reference page extends
the ISO C standard. Applications shall define
the appropriate feature test macro (see the System Interfaces volume
of IEEE Std 1003.1-2001, Section 2.2, The Compilation Environment)
to enable the visibility of these symbols in this
header.
The <stdio.h> header shall define the following macros as positive
integer constant expressions:
BUFSIZ
Size of <stdio.h> buffers.
_IOFBF
Input/output fully buffered.
_IOLBF
Input/output line buffered.
_IONBF
Input/output unbuffered.
L_ctermid
Maximum size of character array to hold ctermid() output.
L_tmpnam
Maximum size of character array to hold tmpnam() output.
SEEK_CUR
Seek relative to current position.
SEEK_END
Seek relative to end-of-file.
SEEK_SET
Seek relative to start-of-file.
The following macros shall be defined as positive integer constant
expressions which denote implementation limits:
{FILENAME_MAX}
Maximum size in bytes of the longest filename string that the implementation
guarantees can be opened.
{FOPEN_MAX}
Number of streams which the implementation guarantees can be open
simultaneously. The value is at least eight.
{TMP_MAX}
Minimum number of unique filenames generated by tmpnam(). Maximum
number of times
an application can call tmpnam() reliably. The value of {TMP_MAX}
is at least 25.
On XSI-conformant systems, the value of {TMP_MAX} is at least 10000.
The following macro name shall be defined as a negative integer constant
expression:
EOF
End-of-file return value.
The following macro name shall be defined as a null pointer constant:
NULL
Null pointer.
The following macro name shall be defined as a string constant:
P_tmpdir
Default directory prefix for tempnam().
The following shall be defined as expressions of type "pointer to
FILE" that point to the FILE objects
associated, respectively, with the standard error, input, and output
streams:
stderr
Standard error output stream.
stdin
Standard input stream.
stdout
Standard output stream.
The following data types shall be defined through typedef:
FILE
A structure containing information about a file.
fpos_t
A non-array type containing all information needed to specify uniquely
every position within a file.
va_list
As described in <stdarg.h> .
size_t
As described in <stddef.h> .
The following shall be declared as functions and may also be defined
as macros. Function prototypes shall be provided.
void clearerr(FILE *);
char *ctermid(char *);
int fclose(FILE *);
FILE *fdopen(int, const char *);
int feof(FILE *);
int ferror(FILE *);
int fflush(FILE *);
int fgetc(FILE *);
int fgetpos(FILE *restrict, fpos_t *restrict);
char *fgets(char *restrict, int, FILE *restrict);
Portions of this text are reprinted and reproduced in electronic form
from IEEE Std 1003.1, 2003 Edition, Standard for Information Technology
-- Portable Operating System Interface (POSIX), The Open Group Base
Specifications Issue 6, Copyright (C) 2001-2003 by the Institute of
Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc and The Open Group. In the
event of any discrepancy between this version and the original IEEE and
The Open Group Standard, the original IEEE and The Open Group Standard
is the referee document. The original Standard can be obtained online at
http://www.opengroup.org/unix/online.html .
IEEE/The Open Group
<stdio.h> (P)
2003
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