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c - Why is fwrite writing more than I tell it to?

FILE *out=fopen64("text.txt","w+");
unsigned int write;
char *outbuf=new char[write];
//fill outbuf
printf("%i
",ftello64(out));
fwrite(outbuf,sizeof(char),write,out);
printf("%i
",write);
printf("%i
",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?

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1 Answer

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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;
}

With VC++:

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

With Cygwin gcc:

/cygdrive/c/Temp $ gcc y.c -o y.exe

/cygdrive/c/Temp $ ./y.exe
02

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