On the GNU system, the file position is truly a character count. You
can specify any character count value as an argument to fseek and
get reliable results for any random access file. However, some ISO C
systems do not represent file positions in this way.
On some systems where text streams truly differ from binary streams, it is impossible to represent the file position of a text stream as a count of characters from the beginning of the file. For example, the file position on some systems must encode both a record offset within the file, and a character offset within the record.
As a consequence, if you want your programs to be portable to these systems, you must observe certain rules:
ftell on a text stream has no predictable
relationship to the number of characters you have read so far. The only
thing you can rely on is that you can use it subsequently as the
offset argument to fseek to move back to the same file
position.
fseek on a text stream, either the offset must
either be zero; or whence must be SEEK_SET and the
offset must be the result of an earlier call to ftell on
the same stream.
ungetc
that haven't been read or discarded. See section Unreading.
But even if you observe these rules, you may still have trouble for long
files, because ftell and fseek use a long int value
to represent the file position. This type may not have room to encode
all the file positions in a large file.
So if you do want to support systems with peculiar encodings for the
file positions, it is better to use the functions fgetpos and
fsetpos instead. These functions represent the file position
using the data type fpos_t, whose internal representation varies
from system to system.
These symbols are declared in the header file `stdio.h'.
fgetpos and
fsetpos.
In the GNU system, fpos_t is equivalent to off_t or
long int. In other systems, it might have a different internal
representation.
fpos_t object pointed to by
position. If successful, fgetpos returns zero; otherwise
it returns a nonzero value and stores an implementation-defined positive
value in errno.
fgetpos on the same stream. If successful, fsetpos
clears the end-of-file indicator on the stream, discards any characters
that were "pushed back" by the use of ungetc, and returns a value
of zero. Otherwise, fsetpos returns a nonzero value and stores
an implementation-defined positive value in errno.
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