I know everybody has told me to use fgets and not gets because of buffer overflow. However, I am a bit confused about the third parameter in fgets()
. As I understand it, fgets is dependent on:
char * fgets ( char * str, int num, FILE * stream );
char* str
is the ptr to where my input will be stored.
num
is the max number of character to be read.
but what is FILE *stream
? If I am just prompting the user to enter a string (like a sentence) should I just type "stdin
" ?
And should I type FILE *stdin
at the top, near main()
?
You are correct. stream
is a pointer to a FILE
structure, like that returned from fopen
. stdin
, stdout
, and stderr
are already defined for your program, so you can use them directly instead of opening or declaring them on your own.
For example, you can read from the standard input with:
fgets(buffer, 10, stdin);
Or from a specific file with:
FILE *f = fopen("filename.txt", "r");
fgets(buffer, 10, f);
Yes, you should just use stdin
. That is a predefined FILE *
that reads from the standard input of your program. And it should already be defined if you have a #include <stdio.h>
at the top of your file (which you'll need for fgets
).
Broadly there are two ways you can communicate with files in C. One is using the low-level OS dependent system calls such as open()
, read()
, write()
etc which work with file descriptors. Another one is using FILE
structures which are used in C library functions like fread()
, fwrite()
etc including the one you mentioned above.
As it is with the UNIX philosophy, everything is a file. So even the standard input (stdin
) is treated as a pointer to a FILE
structure.
tl;dr Yes, you should use stdin
for FILE* stream
in your call to fgets()
FILE is the standard C file. Yes, if you want to read from standard input, stdin is the correct symbol.