For some reason fclose() seems to be causing an error in a program I'm writing. The windows terminal says "process returned 255" when it happens. Below is part of the code:
FILE* output = fopen("random.txt","w");
write(c,output);
//fprintf(output,"shit\n");
fclose(output);
"write" basically writes things into the output file. Even when the program crashes, the data gets output into the file. After the writing operation I can still write to the output file and the text will be there if I do, but somehow closing the file causes an error. Could someone please explain to me what the error code might mean (if anything), and how this error might be solved? Thank you.
EDIT: "write()" writes to the output file and that's all; the only thing it does with the output file is fprintf-ing. It returns nothing because it's a void function. Didn't get to see what fclose() returns because apparently the program crashes before I can check the return value :\
EDIT: Below is the specifics of "write()". I changed it to "write_insult()" to avoid confusion with the system call.
void write_insult(Composite c,FILE* output){
printf("lol\n");
switch (c->type){
case SENTENCE:{
writeSentence(c,output);
break;
}
default: break;
}
}
void writeSentence(Composite c,FILE* output){
FILE* source;
int random = 0;
char* fileName = NULL;
int i = 0;
char* number = malloc(sizeof(char)*2);
if (c->subtype < 10){
number[0] = '0';
sprintf(number+1,"%d\0",c->subtype);
}else{
sprintf(number,"%d\0",c->subtype);
}
fileName = malloc(sizeof(char)*17);
strcpy(fileName,"res/SEN/ / .txt");
fileName[8] = number[0];
fileName[9] = number[1];
fileName[11] = '0';
fileName[12] = '0';
FILE* tester = NULL;
while ((tester = fopen(fileName,"r")) != NULL){
i++;
fclose(tester);
if (i < 10){
fileName[12]++;
}else{
fileName[11]++;
fileName[12] = '0';
i = 0;
}
}
random = rand()%i;
if (random < 10){
number[0] = '0';
sprintf(number+1,"%d\0",random);
}else{
sprintf(number,"%d\0",random);
}
fileName[11] = number[0];
fileName[12] = number[1];
fileName[17] = 0;
source = fopen(fileName,"r");
Table t = parseFile(source); //remember to free
i = 0;
char* word = NULL;
while (i < t->num){
if (isInt(t->content[i])){
word = chooseWord(atoi(t->content[i]));
}else{
word = t->content[i];
}
fprintf(output,"%s ",word);
i++;
}
fclose(source);
destroyTable(t);
}
EDIT: I fixed all the string issues, and the error persists. By the way, if I instead declare the file pointer inside the writeSentence function instead of opening the file beforehand passing it in, and close it before the function stops, somehow it's all fine. The compiler is the one that comes with Pelles C, by the way. It did some wonky things before, so could it be that the fault is not on me?
EDIT: perhaps I should condense the question by asking instead: under what circumstances might fprintf work perfectly on a file opened for writing, but not fclose, which crashes before it could even generate a return value?
EDIT: Thanks, folks, for all the kind help and advice; I found out I've got an unwanted fopen operation somewhere in the code. That seems to be it, for the problem is gone.
write()
.exit(0)
orreturn 0
from main.