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I'm trying to read from a text file and write to one, but every time I execute my code, nothing happens with the text files. By "nothing happens", I mean that the program won't read my input file and no data is exported into my output file. Could someone point out why it is not working? Thanks for any help given in advance. Here is my code:

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>

FILE *inptr, *outptr; 

int main() {
    int a, b, c;
    inptr = fopen("trianglein.txt","r"); //Initialization of pointer and opening of file trianglein.txt
    outptr = fopen("triangleout.txt","w"); //Initialization of pointer and opening of file triangleout.txt

    while((fscanf(inptr,"%d %d %d",&a, &b, &c))!= EOF){  
        fprintf(outptr,"\n%2d %2d %2d\n",a,b,c); 
        if(a+b>c && b+c>a && c+a>b){
            fprintf(outptr, "This is a triangle.\n"); 
            if(a !=b && b !=c && a!=c){ 
                fprintf(outptr, "This is a scalene triangle.\n");
                if(a==b && a==c && c==b){
                    fprintf(outptr, "This is an equilateral triangle.\n");
                    if(a*a+b*b==c*c || b*b+c*c==a*a || a*a+c*c==b*b){
                        fprintf(outptr, "This is a right trianlge.\n");
                    }
                }
            } 
        }
    }

    return 0;
}

trianglein.txt contents:

10 12 15
2 3 7
3 4 5
6 9 5
6 6 6
6 8 10
7 7 9
31
  • 4
    It seems to work for me. As in when I run it triangleout.txt contains stuff. Can you post the contents of your trianglein.txt. (Also you might want to relook at your logic because the right triangle is not an equilateral triangle.)
    – FDinoff
    May 20, 2013 at 3:46
  • 1
    If nothing happens then there's no file "trianglein.txt" in working directory. Check return of fopen. Put file in working directory, if this is a case. Also check content of "trianglein.txt". Using debugger is good idea btw.
    – kotlomoy
    May 20, 2013 at 3:49
  • 1
    @CarealManic: That, too, cannot be the problem. Since fopen has not been passed the b flag, the files are opened in text mode, where the newlines read are normalized to \n, no matter what they were in the file.
    – icktoofay
    May 20, 2013 at 4:10
  • 1
    @Cranderberry It doesn't matter. May 20, 2013 at 4:22
  • 1
    In the toolbar, click project->propterties . Then click the tab bulid targets. You should see something like Output filename and Execution working dir. Change Output filename to program and Execution working dir to . . Then copy/move the file trianglein.txt to the same directory as the program located. It should work then. May 20, 2013 at 5:23

4 Answers 4

3

Multiple problems.

Firstly, you need to check if inptr and outptr are valid by testing against NULL.

Secondly, fscanf can return either EOF, 0 or > 0.

If your input file doesn't contain valid input.

Also there are problems in that you can get 3 ints read successfull, or 2 ints or 1 and the value of a, b and c are only optionally set.

If no conversion took place on the input then the value of zero is returned in which case the while loop will exit.

Also bear in mind that with the scanf style functions this input will succeed and return the value of 1.

"1rubbish"

I think what you may want is something like the following:

// Somewhere near the top
#include <stderr.h>
// ... other includes

const char* inname = "trianglein.txt";
const char* outname = "triangleout.txt";

// Any other stuff


// Inside main...

// Initialization of pointer and opening of file trianglein.txt
if ((inptr = fopen(inname,"r")) == 0){
  fprintf(stderr, "Error opening file %s: %s", inname, strerror(inname));
  return -1;
}

// Initialization of pointer and opening of file triangleout.txt
if ((outptr = fopen(outname,"w")) == 0){
  fprintf(stderr, "Error opening file %s: %s", outname, strerror(outname));
  return -1;
}


int result;
while(true){
  result = fscanf(inptr,"%d %d %d",&a, &b, &c);
  if (result == EOF)
    break;

  if (result < 3)  // Ignore incomplete lines
    continue;

  // do the normal stuff
}  
2
  • Although the "testing against NULL" is semantically correct, and your code correctly uses if(!inptr), the two don't match each other. An if(input != NULL) would explicitly match, but hardly anyone bothers. The idiom tends to be if(inptr = fopen("trianglein.txt") ..., using an assignment in the test. May 20, 2013 at 4:34
  • True, and I'd probably write it that way normally.
    – hookenz
    May 20, 2013 at 20:30
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Your program is working fine in my system. I use Code::Blocks 10.05 on Windows 7.

The only possibility of a logical error occurs when you have the file trianglein.txt with less than 3 integer values to be read by the fscanf(). For example trianglein.txt file with values 1, 1 2, 1 2 3 4, 1 2 3 4 5 etc. will give incorrect values to the variables b and/or c. So initialize a=-1, b=-1, c=-1 before the execution of each iteration of the loop and check them after reading.

If you are running the program check the file triangleout.txt for access rights. Some times you may not have write access on that particular file.

By the way the classification logic is wrong. An equilateral triangle can not be a right angled one.

-1

Try putting

fclose(inptr);

and

fclose(outptr);

at the end of your code.

3
  • +1. I believe that it helps. @thejh can you please explain your idea? May 20, 2013 at 3:46
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    Repeating my comment on Careal Manic's answer, this will not help: As per the C99 draft N1256 §7.20.4.3 ¶4, all streams are flushed on program termination.
    – icktoofay
    May 20, 2013 at 3:47
  • It won't help the question's direct problem, but it is good style to clean up resources even in main(), and it's essential in larger programs. Besides, the querant didn't mention whether a C99 compiler is involved. May 20, 2013 at 4:29
-2

EDIT: As suggested by icktoofay, this answer is wrong.

You have to do fclose() or fflush() in order to get the data written to the file. Insert these code right before return 0;

fclose(inptr);
fclose(outptr);
3
  • 1
    No. As per the C99 draft N1256 §7.20.4.3 ¶4, all streams are flushed on program termination.
    – icktoofay
    May 20, 2013 at 3:46
  • @icktoofay Oh well, you are right. I've just compiled the code. It works. I am not going to delete this answer anyway. May 20, 2013 at 3:53
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    @Cranderberry: it may not have done anything but it's good practice to close your file resources when you're done with them. In this case, because your program terminates directly after - it's handled(not true in all languages), but it won't always be so. May 20, 2013 at 4:04

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