freopen, freopen_s
From cppreference.com
Defined in header <stdio.h>
|
||
(1) | ||
(until C99) | ||
(since C99) | ||
(2) | (since C11) | |
1) First, attempts to close the file associated with
stream
, ignoring any errors. Then, if filename
is not null, attempts to open the file specified by filename
using mode
as if by fopen, and associates that file with the file stream pointed to by stream
. If filename
is a null pointer, then the function attempts to reopen the file that is already associated with stream
(it is implementation defined which mode changes are allowed in this case).2) Same as (1), except that
mode
is treated as in fopen_s and that the pointer to the file stream is written to newstreamptr
and the following errors are detected at runtime and call the currently installed constraint handler function:
-
newstreamptr
is a null pointer -
stream
is a null pointer -
mode
is a null pointer
-
- As with all bounds-checked functions,
freopen_s
is only guaranteed to be available if __STDC_LIB_EXT1__ is defined by the implementation and if the user defines __STDC_WANT_LIB_EXT1__ to the integer constant 1 before includingstdio.h
.
Parameters
filename | - | file name to associate the file stream to |
mode | - | null-terminated character string determining new file access mode |
stream | - | the file stream to modify |
newstreamptr | - | pointer to a pointer where the function stores the result (an out-parameter) |
File access flags
File access mode string |
Meaning | Explanation | Action if file already exists |
Action if file does not exist |
---|---|---|---|---|
"r"
|
read | Open a file for reading | read from start | failure to open |
"w"
|
write | Create a file for writing | destroy contents | create new |
"a"
|
append | Append to a file | write to end | create new |
"r+"
|
read extended | Open a file for read/write | read from start | error |
"w+"
|
write extended | Create a file for read/write | destroy contents | create new |
"a+"
|
append extended | Open a file for read/write | write to end | create new |
File access mode flag "b" can optionally be specified to open a file in binary mode. This flag has no effect on POSIX systems, but on Windows it disables special handling of '\n' and '\x1A'. On the append file access modes, data is written to the end of the file regardless of the current position of the file position indicator. | ||||
The behavior is undefined if the mode is not one of the strings listed above. Some implementations define additional supported modes (e.g. Windows). | ||||
In update mode ('+'), both input and output may be performed, but output cannot be followed by input without an intervening call to fflush, fseek, fsetpos or rewind, and input cannot be followed by output without an intervening call to fseek, fsetpos or rewind, unless the input operation encountered end of file. In update mode, implementations are permitted to use binary mode even when text mode is specified. | ||||
File access mode flag "x" can optionally be appended to "w" or "w+" specifiers. This flag forces the function to fail if the file exists, instead of overwriting it. (C11) | ||||
When using fopen_s or freopen_s , file access permissions for any file created with "w" or "a" prevents other users from accessing it. File access mode flag "u" can optionally be prepended to any specifier that begins with "w" or "a", to enable the default fopen permissions. (C11)
|
Return value
1) A copy of the value of
stream
on success, null pointer on failure.2) zero on success (and a copy of the value of
stream
is written to *newstreamptr, non-zero on error (and null pointer is written to *newstreamptr unless newstreamptr
is itself a null pointer).Notes
freopen
is the only way to change the narrow/wide orientation of a stream once it has been established by an I/O operation or by fwide.
Microsoft CRT version of freopen
does not support any mode changes when filename
is a null pointer and treats this as an error (see documentation). A possible workaround is the non-standard function _setmode()
.
Example
The following code redirects stdout
to a file.
Run this code
#include <stdio.h> #include <stdlib.h> int main(void) { puts("stdout is printed to console"); if (freopen("redir.txt", "w", stdout) == NULL) { perror("freopen() failed"); return EXIT_FAILURE; } puts("stdout is redirected to a file"); // this is written to redir.txt fclose(stdout); return EXIT_SUCCESS; }
Output:
stdout is printed to console
References
- C17 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2018):
- 7.21.5.4 The freopen function (p: 224-225)
- K.3.5.2.2 The freopen_s function (p: 429-430)
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
- 7.21.5.4 The freopen function (p: 307)
- K.3.5.2.2 The freopen_s function (p: 590)
- C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1999):
- 7.19.5.4 The freopen function (p: 272-273)
- C89/C90 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990):
- 4.9.5.4 The freopen function
See also
(C11) |
opens a file (function) |
closes a file (function) |