Performs formatted output to a specified file. Format #include <stdio.h> int fprintf (FILE *file_ptr, const char *format_spec, . . . );
1 – Arguments
file_ptr A pointer to the file to which the output is directed. format_spec A pointer to a character string that contains the format specification. . . . Optional expressions whose resultant types correspond to conversion specifications given in the format specification. If no conversion specifications are given, the output sources can be omitted. Otherwise, the function calls must have exactly as many output sources as there are conversion specifications, and the conversion specifications must match the types of the output sources. Conversion specifications are matched to output sources in left- to-right order. Any excess output sources are ignored.
2 – Example
An example of a conversion specification follows: #include <stdio.h> main() { int temp = 4, temp2 = 17; fprintf(stdout, "The answers are %d, and %d.", temp, temp2); } This example outputs the following to the stdout file: The answers are 4, and 17.
3 – Return Values
x The number of bytes written, excluding the null terminator. Negative value Indicates an error. The function sets errno to one of the following: o EILSEQ - Invalid character detected. o EINVAL - Insufficient arguments. o ENOMEM - Not enough memory available for conversion. o ERANGE - Floating-point calculations overflow. o EVMSERR - Nontranslatable OpenVMS error. vaxc$errno contains the OpenVMS error code. This might indicate that conversion to a numeric value failed because of overflow. The function can also set errno to the following as a result of errors returned from the I/O subsystem: o EBADF - The file descriptor is not valid. o EIO - I/O error. o ENOSPC - No free space on the device containing the file. o ENXIO - Device does not exist. o EPIPE - Broken pipe. o ESPIPE - Illegal seek in a file opened for append. o EVMSERR - Nontranslatable OpenVMS error. vaxc$errno contains the OpenVMS error code. This indicates that an I/O error occurred for which there is no equivalent C error code.