fgetws(S)
fgetws --
get a wide character string from a stream
Syntax
cc . . . -lc
#include <stdio.h>
#include <wchar.h>
wchar_t *fgetws(wchar_t *ws, int n, FILE *stream);
Description
fgetws(S)
converts characters read from the input stream, stream,
to their corresponding wide-character codes.
It places these wide-character codes in the wchar_t
array pointed to by ws.
At most, n-1 characters are read and converted;
a newline character or an end-of-file condition signals the end of the
input, although the newline character is still converted and
transferred to ws.
The wide-character string, ws,
is then null-terminated and returned.
The file position indicator is also advanced appropriately.
The resulting value of the file position indicator is meaningless
if an error occurs.
The st_atime
field
of the file associated with stream
is marked for update by the first successful
execution of
fgetws( )
if the input data was
not pushed back to stream by a prior call to
ungetc(S)
or a call to
ungetwc(S).
All subsequent calls of
fgetws( )
may also update the st_atime
field if a
read(S)
operation on stream is needed to fill the stdio buffer.
Return values
fgetws( )
returns the converted string ws.
If the stream is at end-of-file when
fgetws( )
is called, the
end of file indicator for the stream is set and
fgetws( )
returns a null pointer. If a read error
occurs,
fgetws( )
returns a null pointer and sets
errno
to indicate the error. fgetws also sets the error indicator
for the stream in this case.
Diagnostics
fgetws( )
will fail if data needs to be read and:
[EAGAIN]-
Cannot read the input stream immediately without blocking the process,
and the O_NONBLOCK flag is set for the file descriptor
associated with stream.
[EBADF]-
Not a valid file descriptor open for reading.
[EINTR]-
The read operation was terminated by a signal before any data was read.
[EIO]-
Cannot read from the controlling terminal.
This happens when the process is in a background process group
and the attempt by the process to read from its controlling terminal fails,
either because the process group is orphaned, or
because the process is ignoring or blocking the SIGTTIN signal.
[ENOMEM]-
Not enough storage space available.
[ENXIO]-
Attempt to read from a non-existent device, or from a device
whose capabilities are exceeded.
See also
fstat(S),
read(S),
ungetc(S),
ungetwc(S)
Standards conformance
fgetws( )
is conformant with:
X/Open CAE Specification, System Interfaces and Headers,
Issue 4, 1992.
.
© 2003 Caldera International, Inc. All rights reserved.
SCO OpenServer Release 5.0.7 -- 11 February 2003