Does NEWLINE always flush stdio buffer?
Michael Meissner
meissner at tiktok.dg.com
Mon Jul 17 00:08:55 AEST 1989
In article <4861 at ficc.uu.net> peter at ficc.uu.net (Peter da Silva) writes:
| No, it is not. In fact, if (popping down to the implementations I'm familiar
| with) _filbuf(stdin) calls _flsbuf(stdout) you get all the advantages of
| line-buffered output, obviate the need for most explicit fflush() calls, and
| have almost no overhead. This behaviour was first implemented (to my
| knowledge) in the Berkeley stdio library, and is (I believe) what the dpANS
| is referring to.
|
| In fact, if you implement smart flushing, you can abandon the overhead of
| line buffering completely, without breaking any working programs.
This is not completely true. I've run into programs, which use stdio
for output, and raw read's for input. In this case, the output is NOT
flushed.
--
Michael Meissner, Data General.
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