Ok, here is the deal...i remember creating a program past week that required me to open a file in binary mode and write data to it. At first, i tried using the fopen function, checking if the result is ok, then try to write data. I remember that at first try, the fwrite operation wasn't working. Then, after moving declaration of variables from a place to another, i was finally able to make the fwrite to insert data to the file.
Now, i need to create another similar program to do some other stuff, so i wanted to use the same allocation code (actually, i wanted to create a specific function to do the same), and here is what i was able to come up with:
#include <stdio.h>
int openfile(FILE *main, char *name, int option);
int main(void)
{
FILE *main;
int header_init;
int result;
switch (openfile(main,"main_file.bin",1)) {
case 1:
header_init = -1;
//fseek(main,0,SEEK_SET); --> useless
fwrite(&header_init,sizeof(int),1,main);
printf("ftell = %d\n",ftell(main)); break;
case 2:
fread(&header_init,sizeof(int),1,main);
printf("%d\n",header_init); break;
default:
printf("Error trying to open file\n");
}
printf("header_init is %d\n",header_init);
fclose(main); exit(0);
}
int openfile(FILE *main, char *name, int option)
{
int result_alloc;
int F_OK;
if (result_alloc = access (name, F_OK) != 0) {
printf("File not found, allocating a new one\n");
if ((main= fopen(name,"w+b")) != NULL) return 1;
}
else {
printf("File exist, allocating as r+b\n");
if ((main= fopen(name,"r+b")) != NULL) return 2;
}
printf("Failure trying to open");
return 0;
}
For some unfortunate reason, the fwrite operation is not writing -1 to the allocated file. My intention with this program is so that it will always check for existence of that specific file: if there is one in place, simply open it with r+b to allow update functions without overwriting the actual file contents. Otherwise, allocate a new one with a header value of -1 (i will use this file as a record file with chained list structure).
Seriously, i cannot understand why this is not working. The idea is the same of my previous program. The only thing that changed is that i created a function, because this is going to happen me later (because of the 3rd parameter that will allow me to reduce my code and make it more "readable" - at least this is the intention!). I HAVE to admit that i have some attention to details problem, but i am working hard to get better at it, i am probably missing something stupid in this code, but after hours looking at it i really wanted to ask here for some help. Thanks
Edit: I am running it under z/Linux. What i am trying to understand is, why the code above doesn't write -1 to the file, but the one below writes ok?
#include <stdio.h>
int main(void)
{
FILE *main;
int result_alloc;
int header_init;
int F_OK;
if (result_alloc = access ("test.bin", F_OK) != 0) {
printf("File not found, allocating a new one\n");
if ((main = fopen("test.bin","w+b")) == NULL) {
printf("Failure trying to open file");
return 1;
}
else {
header_init = -1;
printf("current pos is: w+b %d\n",ftell(main));
fwrite(&header_init,sizeof(int),1,main);
printf("current pos is: write header_init %d\n",ftell(main));
}
}
else {
if ((main = fopen("test.bin","r+b")) == NULL) {
printf("Failure trying to open file");
return 2;
}
else {
printf("current pos is: r+b %d\n",ftell(main));
fread(&header_init,sizeof(int),1,main);
printf("current pos is: read header_init %d\n",ftell(main));
}
}
}
int F_OK; /**/ access (name, F_OK);
doesn't do what you think it does. Do enable compiler warnings.openfile()
isopenfile(FILE **main, char *name, int option)
. It must be called byopenfile(&main,"main_file.bin",1)
openfile()
replace all occurrences ofmain
by(*main)
.-Wall -Wextra -pedantic
then fix the code until no more warnings are issued during compilation. Do not type-cast to silence the compiler.