The difference between stdout and STDOUT_FILENO
Solution 1:
stdout
is a FILE*
"constant" giving the standard outout stream. So obviously fprintf(stdout, "x=%d\n", x);
has the same behavior as printf("x=%d\n", x);
; you use stdout
for <stdio.h>
functions like fprintf
, fputs
etc..
STDOUT_FILENO
is an integer file descriptor (actually, the integer 1). You might use it for write
syscall.
The relation between the two is STDOUT_FILENO == fileno(stdout)
(Except after you do weird things like fclose(stdout);
, or perhaps some freopen
after some fclose(stdin)
, which you should almost never do! See this, as commented by J.F.Sebastian)
You usually prefer the FILE*
things, because they are buffered (so usually perform well). Sometimes, you may want to call fflush
to flush buffers.
You could use file descriptor numbers for syscalls like write(2) (which is used by the stdio
library), or poll(2). But using syscalls is clumpsy. It may give you very good efficiency (but that is hard to code), but very often the stdio
library is good enough (and more portable).
(Of course you should #include <stdio.h>
for the stdio functions, and #include <unistd.h>
-and some other headers- for the syscalls like write
. And the stdio functions are implemented with syscalls, so fprintf
may call write
).