In C, a "stream" is an abstraction; from the program's perspective it is simply a producer (input stream) or consumer (output stream) of bytes. It can correspond to a file on disk, to a pipe, to your terminal, or to some other device such as a printer or tty. The FILE
type contains information about the stream. Normally, you don't mess with a FILE
object's contents directly, you just pass a pointer to it to the various I/O routines.
There are three standard streams: stdin
is a pointer to the standard input stream, stdout
is a pointer to the standard output stream, and stderr
is a pointer to the standard error output stream. In an interactive session, the three usually refer to your console, although you can redirect them to point to other files or devices:
$ myprog < inputfile.dat > output.txt 2> errors.txt
In this example, stdin
now points to inputfile.dat
, stdout
points to output.txt
, and stderr
points to errors.txt
.
fprintf
writes formatted text to the output stream you specify.
printf
is equivalent to writing fprintf(stdout, ...)
and writes formatted text to wherever the standard output stream is currently pointing.
sprintf
writes formatted text to an array of char
, as opposed to a stream.
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