What is EOF in the C programming language?

How do you get to see the last print? In other words what to put in for EOF? I checked the definitions and it says EOF is -1.

And if you enter Ctrl-D you won't see anything.

#include <stdio.h>

int main() {
 int c;
 while((c = getchar() != EOF)) {
  printf("%d\n", c);
 }
 printf("%d - at EOF\n", c);
}

Solution 1:

On Linux systems and OS X, the character to input to cause an EOF is Ctrl-D. For Windows, it's Ctrl-Z.

Depending on the operating system, this character will only work if it's the first character on a line, i.e. the first character after an Enter. Since console input is often line-oriented, the system may also not recognize the EOF character until after you've followed it up with an Enter.

And yes, if that character is recognized as an EOF, then your program will never see the actual character. Instead, a C program will get a -1 from getchar().

Solution 2:

You should change your parenthesis to

while((c = getchar()) != EOF)

Because the "=" operator has a lower precedence than the "!=" operator. Then you will get the expected results. Your expression is equal to

while (c = (getchar()!= EOF))

You are getting the two 1's as output, because you are making the comparison "c!=EOF". This will always become one for the character you entered and then the "\n" that follows by hitting return. Except for the last comparison where c really is EOF it will give you a 0.

EDIT about EOF: EOF is typically -1, but this is not guaranteed by the standard. The standard only defines about EOF in section 7.19.1:

EOF which expands to an integer constant expression, with type int and a negative value, that is returned by several functions to indicate end-of-file, that is, no more input from a stream;

It is reasonable to assume that EOF equals -1, but when using EOF you should not test against the specific value, but rather use the macro.

Solution 3:

The value of EOF is a negative integer to distinguish it from "char" values that are in the range 0 to 255. It is typically -1, but it could be any other negative number ... according to the POSIX specs, so you should not assume it is -1.

The ^D character is what you type at a console stream on UNIX/Linux to tell it to logically end an input stream. But in other contexts (like when you are reading from a file) it is just another data character. Either way, the ^D character (meaning end of input) never makes it to application code.

As @Bastien says, EOF is also returned if getchar() fails. Strictly speaking, you should call ferror or feof to see whether the EOF represents an error or an end of stream. But in most cases your application will do the same thing in either case.

Solution 4:

Couple of typos:

while((c = getchar())!= EOF)

in place of:

while((c = getchar() != EOF))

Also getchar() treats a return key as a valid input, so you need to buffer it too.EOF is a marker to indicate end of input. Generally it is an int with all bits set.


#include <stdio.h>
int main()
{
 int c;
 while((c = getchar())!= EOF)
 {
  if( getchar() == EOF )
    break;
  printf(" %d\n", c);
 }
  printf("%d %u %x- at EOF\n", c , c, c);
}

prints:

49
50
-1 4294967295 ffffffff- at EOF

for input:

1
2
<ctrl-d>

Solution 5:

EOF means end of file. It's a sign that the end of a file is reached, and that there will be no data anymore.

Edit:

I stand corrected. In this case it's not an end of file. As mentioned, it is passed when CTRL+d (linux) or CTRL+z (windows) is passed.