Reader small image

You're reading from  Learn C Programming. - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inAug 2022
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781801078450
Edition2nd Edition
Right arrow
Author (1)
Jeff Szuhay
Jeff Szuhay
author image
Jeff Szuhay

Jeff Szuhay is the principal developer at QuarterTil2 which specializes in graphics-rich software chronographs for desktop environments. In his software career of over 35 years, he has engaged in a full range of development activities from systems analysis and systems performance tuning to application design, from initial development through full testing and final delivery. Throughout that time, he has taught computer applications and programming languages at various educational levels from elementary school students to university students, as well as developed and presented professional, on-site training.
Read more about Jeff Szuhay

Right arrow

Exploring unformatted I/O

Not every string input needs to be converted into some binary value. Often, we simply need to read or write strings without any additional formatting. There is a family of unformatted string I/O functions that can be used to read or write entire lines of characters without any formatting applied. However, these functions require each string to be formed into lines. A line is loosely defined as a string that is terminated by the <newline> character. Each of these has a console version as well as a file/stream version. For the remainder of this chapter, we will briefly explore this family of functions. 

Getting the string I/O to/from the console

To read and write a line of text, there are the puts() and gets() console functions and their stream equivalents, fputs() and fgets(), as shown in the following table:

The puts() and fputs() functions...

lock icon
The rest of the page is locked
Previous PageNext Page
You have been reading a chapter from
Learn C Programming. - Second Edition
Published in: Aug 2022Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781801078450

Author (1)

author image
Jeff Szuhay

Jeff Szuhay is the principal developer at QuarterTil2 which specializes in graphics-rich software chronographs for desktop environments. In his software career of over 35 years, he has engaged in a full range of development activities from systems analysis and systems performance tuning to application design, from initial development through full testing and final delivery. Throughout that time, he has taught computer applications and programming languages at various educational levels from elementary school students to university students, as well as developed and presented professional, on-site training.
Read more about Jeff Szuhay