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Home/ Questions/Q 138875
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Asked: May 11, 20262026-05-11T07:20:04+00:00 2026-05-11T07:20:04+00:00

I’m working on some code that generates a lot of ignoring return value of

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I’m working on some code that generates a lot of

ignoring return value of ‘size_t fwrite(const void*, size_t, size_t, FILE*)’, declared with attribute warn_unused_result 

warnings when compiled with g++, and I’m wondering about the best programming pattern to actually record and handle the return value of a large number of separate sequential fwrites (i.e. not the same fwrite in a loop)

Let’s say that the code looks like this at the moment:

fwrite (&blah, sizeof (blah), 1, fp); // ... more code ... fwrite (&foo, sizeof (foo), 1, fp); // ... more code ... 

I’m currently thinking about something like this, but I may have difficulty cleaning up the file pointer:

if (fwrite (&blah, sizeof (blah), 1, fp) != 1) return someerrorcode; // ... more code ... if (fwrite (&foo, sizeof (foo), 1, fp) != 1) return someerrorcode; // ... more code ... 

I think that approach is clearly better than nesting, which would get too crazy too quick:

if (fwrite (&blah, sizeof (blah), 1, fp) == 1) {    // ... more code ...    if (fwrite (&foo, sizeof (foo), 1, fp) == 1) {;       // ... more code ...    } } 

Surely there is already an established best-practice pattern for this sort of thing, though?

Of course, as I am mainly looking into this to get rid of the compiler warnings, I could just assign the return value to a dummy variable and ignore it, but I’d like to try doing it the right way first.

dummy = fwrite (&blah, sizeof (blah), 1, fp); // ... more code ... dummy = fwrite (&foo, sizeof (foo), 1, fp); // ... more code ... 

Update: I’ve removed the c++ tag as this code is really just c being compiled using g++, so c based solutions are needed to keep with the rest of the code base.

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  1. 2026-05-11T07:20:04+00:00Added an answer on May 11, 2026 at 7:20 am

    I’d do something along these lines:

    FILE * file = fopen('foo', 'wb'); if(!file) return FAILURE;  // assume failure by default _Bool success = 0;  do {     if(!fwrite(&bar, sizeof(bar), 1, file))         break;      // [...]      if(!fwrite(&baz, sizeof(baz), 1, file))         break;      // [...]      success = 1; } while(0);  fclose(file);  return success ? SUCCESS : FAILURE; 

    With a little C99 macro magic

    #define with(SUBJECT, FINALIZE, ...) do { \     if(SUBJECT) do { __VA_ARGS__ } while(0); if(SUBJECT) FINALIZE; \ } while(0) 

    and using ferror() instead of our own error flag as suggested by Jonathan Leffler, this can be written as

    FILE * file = fopen('foo', 'wb'); with(file, fclose(file), {     if(!fwrite(&bar, sizeof(bar), 1, file))         break;      // [...]      if(!fwrite(&baz, sizeof(baz), 1, file))         break;      // [...] });  return file && !ferror(file) ? SUCCESS : FAILURE; 

    If there are other error conditions aside from io errors, you’ll still have to track them with one or more error variables, though.

    Also, your check against sizeof(blah) is wrong: fwrite() returns the count of objects written!

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