Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.

fseek---set file position

Synopsis
#include <stdio.h>
int fseek(FILE *fp, long offset, int whence)

Description
Objects of type FILE can have a "position" that records how much of the file your program has already read. Many of the stdio functions depend on this position, and many change it as a side effect.

You can use fseek to set the position for the file identified by fp. The value of offset determines the new position, in one of three ways selected by the value of whence (defined as macros in `stdio.h'):

SEEK_SET---offset is the absolute file position (an offset from the beginning of the file) desired. offset must be positive.

SEEK_CUR---offset is relative to the current file position. offset can meaningfully be either positive or negative.

SEEK_END---offset is relative to the current end of file. offset can meaningfully be either positive (to increase the size of the file) or negative.

See ftell to determine the current file position.


Returns
fseek returns 0 when successful. If fseek fails, the result is EOF. The reason for failure is indicated in errno: either ESPIPE (the stream identified by fp doesn't support repositioning) or EINVAL (invalid file position).


Portability
ANSI C requires fseek.

Supporting OS subroutines required: close, fstat, isatty, lseek, read, sbrk, write.



Go to the first, previous, next, last section, table of contents.