4

I am trying to use the following C code to print out an array that I have passed in. It should output the text in hexadecimal format one on each line and I have no problems opening the file. When I first wrote it, I had no problems with it working I opened the output file and my array was there. I changed the fileOutName parameter and now I can't get it to print out anything I have tried changing it back and to a few other things and nothing seems to work. Also when I debug it seems like pOutfile is a bad pointer, but like I said it still creates the file it just won't write anything in it. Any help would be appreciated. Thanks

printoutput(int output[], char * fileOutName){
    int i = 0;
    FILE * pOutfile;
    pOutfile = fopen( fileOutName, "w" );
    while(output[i] != 0){
        fprintf( pOutfile, "0x%0.4X\n", output[i] );
        i++;
    }
}
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  • 6
    always flush :-) fflush(pOutfile);
    – obataku
    Sep 17, 2012 at 0:59
  • Also check the return of fopen. This is one of the API cases where it is nearly mandatory to handle errors. They are very common (no write rights for instance, missing media, file already existing but locked, magical filename that is not allowed to be used by apps (/proc or PRN in windows for example)). Sep 17, 2012 at 13:33

3 Answers 3

11

Always clean up after yourself. You're missing an fclose(pOutfile).

1
  • Wow thanks! For some reason that never occurred to me but its working now!
    – farnett
    Sep 17, 2012 at 1:12
1

It should output the text in hexadecimal format one on each line ...

This line

fprintf( pOutfile, "0x%0.4X\n", 5 );

always formats the same number - 5. It probably should be

fprintf( pOutfile, "0x%0.4X\n", output[i] );
1
  • 1
    sorry that was an error by me I was using the 5 for testing and forgot to change it back :(
    – farnett
    Sep 17, 2012 at 1:22
0

You're counting on the element beyond the bounds of the array to be 0, which may not be the case unless you're explicitly setting it. If you are, that's okay. Usually, pass arrays along with their size; this is safer, easier to read, and more portable.

printoutput(int output[], int size, char * fileOutName){
    int i=0;
    FILE * pOutfile;
    pOutfile = fopen( fileOutName, "w" );
    while(i!=size){
        fprintf( pOutfile, "0x%0.4X\n", output[i] );
        ++i;
        }
    fclose(pOutfile)
}

Also, I HIGHLY recommend getting used to using the pre-increment operator instead of post-increment. In situations like this, it probably won't make a difference, but for large inputs or complex types, it can reduce execution time. Hence, ++i instead of i++.

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