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First of all sorry if it's a dumb question (and surely it is), but I'm really new to the usage of Syscall in Unix. I was trying to write something on a file using "write"; it correctly create the file, but there's nothing written on it, that's the code:

int main(void) {
   int fd;
   char *string = "Test";
   if(fd=open("home/user/test.txt", O_WRONLY | O_APPEND | O_CREAT)==-1){
    perror("Open failed");

   }
   printf("%d\n", strlen(string));
   printf("Wrote %d byte on the file", write(fd,string,strlen(string)));
   close(fd);
   return 0;
}

Where's my problem ? Thank you

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  • What does write return? What are you getting in your second printf?
    – Jay
    Jun 16, 2012 at 17:49

1 Answer 1

6

The problem seems to be with this line:

fd=open("home/user/test.txt", O_WRONLY | O_APPEND | O_CREAT)==-1

The equal comparison operator == has higher precedence so it is evaluated first. So instead of assigning the file descriptor number to fd, you are assigning the result of the comparison to fd.

Fixing this is simple, as you can surround the part before the comparison in parentheses ().

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  • Oh you're right, thank you so much ^^
    – cifz
    Jun 16, 2012 at 19:26

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