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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: May 15, 20262026-05-15T20:00:06+00:00 2026-05-15T20:00:06+00:00

I’ve got a char* buffer to hold a file that i read in binary

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I’ve got a char* buffer to hold a file that i read in binary mode. I know the length of the file is 70 bytes and this is the value being used to produce a buffer of the correct size. The problem is, there is 17 or 18 extra spaces in the array so some random characters are being added to the end. Could the be a unicode issue?

ulFLen stores the size of the file in bytes and has the correct value (70 for the file i’m testing on)

//Set up a buffer to store the file
pcfBuffer = new char[ulFLen];

//Reading the file
cout<<"Inputting File...";
fStream.seekg(0,ios::beg);
fStream.read(pcfBuffer,ulFLen);
if(!fStream.good()){cout<<"FAILED"<<endl;}else{cout<<"SUCCESS"<<endl;}
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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-05-15T20:00:06+00:00Added an answer on May 15, 2026 at 8:00 pm

    As it is a char array, you probably forgot a terminating NUL character.

    The right way in this case would be:

    //Set up a buffer to store the file and a terminating NUL character
    pcfBuffer = new char[ulFLen+1];
    
    //Reading the file
    cout<<"Inputting File...";
    fStream.seekg(0,ios::beg);
    fStream.read(pcfBuffer,ulFLen);
    if(!fStream.good()){cout<<"FAILED"<<endl;}else{cout<<"SUCCESS"<<endl;}
    
    // Add NUL character
    pcfBuffer[ulFLen] = 0;
    

    But note that you only need a terminating NUL character for routines that depend on it, like string routines or when using printf using %s. If you use routines that use the fact that you know the length (70 characters), it will work without a NUL character, too.

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