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When reading data from a file it must be opened for reading first, and
likewise when writing to a file. The fopen
function returns a
pointer to an open file that is ready to be read or written. Once all
data has been read from or written to the opened file it should be closed.
The fclose
function does this. The following code illustrates
the basic pattern for writing to a file, but a very similar pattern is
used when reading a file.
filename = "myfile.txt"; fid = fopen (filename, "w"); # Do the actual I/O here… fclose (fid);
Open a file for low-level I/O or query open files and file descriptors.
The first form of the fopen
function opens the named file with
the specified mode (read-write, read-only, etc.) and architecture
interpretation (IEEE big endian, IEEE little endian, etc.), and returns
an integer value that may be used to refer to the file later. If an
error occurs, fid is set to -1 and msg contains the
corresponding system error message. The mode is a one or two
character string that specifies whether the file is to be opened for
reading, writing, or both.
The second form of the fopen
function returns a vector of file ids
corresponding to all the currently open files, excluding the
stdin
, stdout
, and stderr
streams.
The third form of the fopen
function returns information about the
open file given its file id.
For example,
myfile = fopen ("splat.dat", "r", "ieee-le");
opens the file splat.dat for reading. If necessary, binary numeric values will be read assuming they are stored in IEEE format with the least significant bit first, and then converted to the native representation.
Opening a file that is already open simply opens it again and returns a separate file id. It is not an error to open a file several times, though writing to the same file through several different file ids may produce unexpected results.
The possible values ‘mode’ may have are
Open a file for reading.
Open a file for writing. The previous contents are discarded.
Open or create a file for writing at the end of the file.
Open an existing file for reading and writing.
Open a file for reading or writing. The previous contents are discarded.
Open or create a file for reading or writing at the end of the file.
Append a "t"
to the mode string to open the file in text mode or a
"b"
to open in binary mode. On Windows and Macintosh systems, text
mode reading and writing automatically converts linefeeds to the
appropriate line end character for the system (carriage-return linefeed
on Windows, carriage-return on Macintosh). The default when no mode is
specified is binary mode.
Additionally, you may append a "z"
to the mode string to open a
gzipped file for reading or writing. For this to be successful, you
must also open the file in binary mode.
The parameter arch is a string specifying the default data format for the file. Valid values for arch are:
The format of the current machine.
IEEE big endian format.
IEEE little endian format.
however, conversions are currently only supported for ‘native’ ‘ieee-be’, and ‘ieee-le’ formats.
When opening a new file that does not yet exist, permissions will be set to
0666 - umask
.
See also: fclose, fgets, fgetl, fscanf, fread, fputs, fdisp, fprintf, fwrite, fskipl, fseek, frewind, ftell, feof, ferror, fclear, fflush, freport, umask.
Close the file specified by the file descriptor fid.
If successful, fclose
returns 0, otherwise, it returns -1. The
second form of the fclose
call closes all open files except
stdout
, stderr
, and stdin
.
Programming Note: When using "all"
the file descriptors associated
with gnuplot will also be closed. This will prevent further plotting with
gnuplot until Octave is closed and restarted.
Return true if fid refers to an open file.
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