getc
reads character from I/O stream fp
More precisely, getc
attempts to read a character from the fp
stream.
getc
stores it in the variable ch
getc
returns an int
value, and the assignment ch = getc(fp)
stores that value in ch
, if it is representable in the ch
type. If it is not representable, it is converted in a manner that depends on the ch
type. To avoid complications with this conversion, ch
should be int
.
ch
is tested against EOF
…
Yes, the resulting value of ch
is compared with EOF
. This makes the type important: If getc
returns EOF
and ch
is, say, a character type that cannot represent the value of EOF
, then the conversion will cause a different value to be stored in ch
, and then it will not compare equal to EOF
.
… which is normally equivalent to -1
(depending on how it is defined for you).
EOF
may be −1 in many C implementations, but it is normal for it to have any negative int
value.
- When
EOF
is returned it indicates that the End Of File
indicator for a specific stream has been set.
No, an EOF
return indicates that either end-of-file has been reached (and a further read was attempted) or an error occurred. C 2018 7.21.7.5 3 says:
The getc
function returns the next character from the input stream pointed to by stream
. If the stream is at end-of-file, the end-of-file indicator for the stream is set and getc returns EOF
. If a read error occurs, the error indicator for the stream is set and getc
returns EOF
.
This means that a previous read operation has attempted to read past the end of the file.
It means either a previous operation or the current operation attempted to read past the end of the file or a previous operation or the current operation encountered an error (and these previous conditions have not been cleared, as by calling rewind
or clearerr
).
In this loop as getc
gets to the end of the file, does it try to eventually read past the end of the file which causes it to eventually return EOF
?
If the stream is connected to a file of finite and unchanging size, that loop will eventually attempt to read past the end of file, if nothing in the body of the loop resets the file position, at which point EOF
will be returned and the loop will exit. However, if the stream is connected to some “infinite” supply of data, such as a pipe, it is possible the loop will never encounter the end of the stream.