feof

< c‎ | io
 
 
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feof
Operations on files
 
Defined in header <stdio.h>
int feof( FILE *stream );

Checks if the end of the given file stream has been reached.

Parameters

stream - the file stream to check

Return value

nonzero value if the end of the stream has been reached, otherwise 0

Notes

This function only reports the stream state as reported by the most recent I/O operation, it does not examine the associated data source. For example, if the most recent I/O was a fgetc, which returned the last byte of a file, feof returns zero. The next fgetc fails and changes the stream state to end-of-file. Only then feof returns non-zero.

In typical usage, input stream processing stops on any error; feof and ferror are then used to distinguish between different error conditions.

Example

#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
 
int main(void)
{
    FILE* fp = fopen("test.txt", "r");
    if(!fp) {
        perror("File opening failed");
        return EXIT_FAILURE;
    }
 
    int c; // note: int, not char, required to handle EOF
    while ((c = fgetc(fp)) != EOF) { // standard C I/O file reading loop
       putchar(c);
    }
 
    if (ferror(fp))
        puts("I/O error when reading");
    else if (feof(fp))
        puts("End of file reached successfully");
 
    fclose(fp);
}


References

  • C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
  • 7.21.10.2 The feof function (p: 339)
  • C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1999):
  • 7.19.10.2 The feof function (p: 305)
  • C89/C90 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1990):
  • 4.9.10.2 The feof function

See also

clears errors
(function)
displays a character string corresponding of the current error to stderr
(function)
checks for a file error
(function)