Guardian Native C Library Calls Reference Manual (G06.29+, H06.08+, J06.03+)

fputc(3) Guardian Native C Library Calls Reference Manual
NAME
fputc - Writes a byte to a specified output stream
LIBRARY
G-series native Guardian processes: $SYSTEM.SYSnn.ZCRTLSRL
G-series native OSS processes: /G/system/sysnn/zcrtlsrl
H-series and J-series native Guardian processes: $SYSTEM.ZDLLnnn.ZCRTLDLL
32-bit H-series and J-series OSS processes: /G/system/zdllnnn/zcrtldll
64-bit H-series and J-series OSS processes: /G/system/zdllnnn/ycrtldll
SYNOPSIS
#include <stdio.h>
int fputc(
int c,
FILE *stream);
PARAMETERS
c Species the character to be written.
stream Points to the file structure of an open file.
DESCRIPTION
The fputc() macro writes the character c to the output specified by the stream parameter. The
character is written at the position at which the file pointer is currently pointing, if defined.
With the exception of stderr, output streams are, by default, buffered if they refer to files, or line
buffered if they refer to terminals. The standard error output stream, stderr, is unbuffered by
default, but using the freopen( ) function causes it to become buffered or line buffered. Use the
setbuf() function to change the stream buffering strategy.
When an output stream is unbuffered, information is queued for writing on the destination file or
terminal as soon as it is written. When an output stream is buffered, many characters are saved
and written as a block. When an output stream is line-buffered, each line of output is queued for
writing on the destination terminal as soon as the line is completed (that is, as soon as a newline
character is written or terminal input is requested).
The st_ctime and st_mtime fields of the file are marked for update between the successful exe-
cution of the fputc() function, and the next successful completion of a call to the fush() or
fclose() function on the same stream, or a call to the exit() or abort() function.
NOTES
The fputc() function is never a macro.
The fputc() function runs more slowly than putc(), but takes less space per invocation.
RETURN VALUES
The fputc() function, upon successful completion, returns the value written. If this function
fails, it returns the constant EOF and sets errno.
ERRORS
The fputc() function fails if:
The stream parameter is not open for writing.
The output file size cannot be increased.
The stream is unbuffered.
The streams buffer needed to be flushed and the function call caused an underlying
write() or lseek() to be invoked and this underlying operation fails.
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