filepos
sets or returns the position within a file
Calling Sequence
Parameters
Description
Thread Safety
Examples
filepos(file)
filepos(file, pos)
file
-
file name or file descriptor
pos
integer offset into the file
filepos with one argument returns the current position within the specified file. This is the position at which the next read or write takes place.
filepos with two arguments sets the position within the specified file and returns that new position.
A specified position of infinity sets the current position to the end of the file.
If a file name is given, and that file is not yet open, it is opened in READ mode with type BINARY.
With a TEXT file, to determine a position suitable for passing to filepos, call filepos. Only values returned by filepos(file) are guaranteed to be meaningful when used in filepos(file, value). Counting characters while reading or writing is not reliable, because newline characters are translated from/to local conventions, which may use more than a single character. However, filepos(file,infinity) is always valid.
The filepos command is thread safe as of Maple 15.
Parallel calls to file i/o commands on the same file descriptor will be serialized in an arbitrary order. If you need the commands to execute in a particular order you must use Maple's synchronization tools to enforce this. See Threads:-Mutex.
For more information on thread safety, see index/threadsafe.
Moves to the end and returns the size.
filepos⁡testFile,∞
15
See Also
feof
iostatus
Download Help Document