fgetws
From cppreference.com
                    
                                        
                    
                    
                                                            
                    |   Defined in header  <wchar.h>
  | 
||
|   wchar_t* fgetws( wchar_t* str, int count, FILE* stream );  | 
 (since C95)  (until C99)  | 
|
|   wchar_t* fgetws( wchar_t* restrict str, int count, FILE* restrict stream );  | 
(since C99) | |
Reads at most count - 1 wide characters from the given file stream and stores them in str. The produced wide string is always null-terminated. Parsing stops if end-of-file occurs or a newline wide character is found, in which case str will contain that wide newline character.
Parameters
| str | - | wide string to read the characters to | 
| count | - | the length of str | 
| stream | - | file stream to read the data from | 
Return value
str on success, a null pointer on an error
Example
| This section is incomplete Reason: no example  | 
References
- C23 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2024):
 
- 7.29.3.2 The fgetws function (p: TBD)
 
- C17 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2018):
 
- 7.29.3.2 The fgetws function (p: TBD)
 
- C11 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:2011):
 
- 7.29.3.2 The fgetws function (p: 422)
 
- C99 standard (ISO/IEC 9899:1999):
 
- 7.24.3.2 The fgetws function (p: 367-368)
 
See also
|    (C95)(C95)(C95)(C11)(C11)(C11)  | 
   reads formatted wide character input from stdin, a file stream or a buffer  (function)  | 
|    (C95)  | 
   gets a wide character from a file stream  (function)  | 
|    (C95)  | 
   writes a wide string to a file stream  (function)  | 
|    (dynamic memory TR)  | 
   read from a stream into an automatically resized buffer until delimiter/end of line  (function)  | 
|   C++ documentation for fgetws 
 | |