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Revision as of 12:11, 11 June 2006 editDkasak (talk | contribs)495 edits Sample usage: Synchronized this section with the one in the getchar() article.← Previous edit Revision as of 12:12, 11 June 2006 edit undoDkasak (talk | contribs)495 editsm Sample usageNext edit →
Line 16: Line 16:
int main(void) int main(void)
{ {
char str; char str;
int ch, n = 0; int ch, n = 0;
while ((str = getchar()) != EOF && n < 1000) while ((str = getchar()) != EOF && n < 1000)
++n; ++n;
for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i) for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i)
putchar(str);
{

putchar(str);
putchar('\n'); /* trailing '\n' needed in Standard C */
}
putchar('\n');
return 0; return 0;
} }
</pre> </pre>

Revision as of 12:12, 11 June 2006


putchar is a function in C programming language that writes a single character to the standard output stream, stdout. Its prototype is as follows:

int putchar (int character)

The character to be printed is fed into the function as an argument, and if the writing is successful, the argument character is returned. Otherwise, end-of-file is returned.

The putchar function is specified in the C standard library header file stdio.h.

Sample usage

The following program uses getchar to read characters into an array and print them out using the putchar function after an end-of-file character is found.

 #include <stdio.h>
 int main(void)
 {
   char str;
   int ch, n = 0;
   while ((str = getchar()) != EOF && n < 1000)
     ++n;
   for (int i = 0; i < n; ++i)
     putchar(str);
   putchar('\n'); /* trailing '\n' needed in Standard C */
   return 0;
 }

The program specifies the reading length's maximum value at 1000 characters. It will stop reading either after reading 1000 characters or after reading in an end-of-file indicatorm, whichever comes first.

See also

References

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