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This manual page is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual. The Linux implementation of this interface

Application Usage

       None.

Description

       The  functionality  described  on  this  reference  page is aligned with the ISO C standard. Any conflict
       between the requirements described  here  and  the  ISO C  standard  is  unintentional.  This  volume  of
       POSIX.1‐2017 defers to the ISO C standard.

       A  file  with  associated  buffering is called a stream and is declared to be a pointer to a defined type
       FILE.  The fopen() function shall create certain descriptive data for a stream and return  a  pointer  to
       designate  the  stream  in all further transactions. Normally, there are three open streams with constant
       pointers declared in the <stdio.h> header and associated with the standard open files.

       At program start-up, three streams shall be predefined and need not be opened explicitly: standardinput
       (for  reading  conventional input), standardoutput (for writing conventional output), and standarderror
       (for writing diagnostic output). When opened, the standard  error  stream  is  not  fully  buffered;  the
       standard input and standard output streams are fully buffered if and only if the stream can be determined
       not to refer to an interactive device.

       The following symbolic values in <unistd.h> define the file descriptors that shall be associated with the
       C-language stdin, stdout, and stderr when the application is started:

       STDIN_FILENO  Standard input value, stdin.  Its value is 0.

       STDOUT_FILENO Standard output value, stdout.  Its value is 1.

       STDERR_FILENO Standard error value, stderr.  Its value is 2.

       The stderr stream is expected to be open for reading and writing.

Errors

       No errors are defined.

       Thefollowingsectionsareinformative.

Examples

       None.

Future Directions

       None.

Name

       stderr, stdin, stdout — standard I/O streams

Prolog

       This  manual  page  is part of the POSIX Programmer's Manual.  The Linux implementation of this interface
       may differ (consult the corresponding Linux manual page for details of Linux behavior), or the  interface
       may not be implemented on Linux.

Rationale

       None.

Return Value

       None.

See Also

fclose(),  feof(),  ferror(),  fileno(),  fopen(), fprintf(), fread(), fscanf(), fseek(), getc(), gets(),
       popen(), putc(), puts(), read(), setbuf(), setvbuf(), tmpfile(), ungetc(), vfprintf()

       The Base Definitions volume of POSIX.1‐2017, <stdio.h>, <unistd.h>

Synopsis

       #include <stdio.h>

       extern FILE *stderr, *stdin, *stdout;

See Also