Where is hex code of the "EOF" character?

As far as know in the end of all files, specially text files, there is a Hex code for EOF or NULL character. And when we want to write a program and read the contents of a text file, we send the read function until we receive that EOF hexcode.

My question : I downloaded some tools to see a hex view of a text file. but I can't see any hex code for EOF(End Of File/NULL) or EOT(End Of Text)


ASCII/Hex code tables :

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This is output of Hex viewer tools:

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Note : My input file is a text file that its content is "Where is hex code of "EOF"?"

Appreciate your time and consideration.


Solution 1:

There is no such thing as a EOF character. The operating system knows exactly how many bytes a file contains (this is stored alongside other metadata like permissions, creation date, and the name), and hence can tell programs that try to read the eleventh byte of a ten byte file: You've reached the end of file, there are no more bytes to read.

In fact, the "EOF" value returned for example by C functions like getchar is explicitly an int value outside the range of a byte, so it cannot possibly be stored in a file!

Sometimes, certain file formats insist on adding NUL terminators (probably because that's how strings are usually stored in C), though usually these delimit multiple records in a single file, not the file as a whole. And such decoration usually disqualifies a file from being considered a "text file".

ASCII codes like ETX and NUL date back to the days of teletypewriters and friends. NUL is used in C for in-memory strings, but this has no bearing on file systems.

Solution 2:

There was - a long long time ago - an End Of File marker but it hasn't been used in files for many years.

You can demonstrate a distant echo of it on windows using:

C:\>copy con junk.txt
Hello
Hello again
- Press <Ctrl> and <z>
C:\>dump junk.txt
junk.txt:
00000000  4865 6c6c 6f0d 0a48 656c 6c6f 2061 6761 Hello..Hello aga
00000010  696e 0d0a                               in..
C:\>

Note the use of Ctrl-Z as an EOT marker.

However, notice also that the Ctrl-Z does not appear in the file any more - it used to appear as a 0x1a but only on some operating systems and even then not consistently.

Use of ETX (0x03) stopped even before those dim and distant times.

Solution 3:

There is no such thing as EOF. EOF is just a value returned by file reading functions to tell you the file pointer reached the end of the file.