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Home/ Questions/Q 8150463
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Editorial Team
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Editorial Team
Asked: June 6, 20262026-06-06T15:04:14+00:00 2026-06-06T15:04:14+00:00

With the C standard library stdio.h , I read that to output ASCII/text data,

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With the C standard library stdio.h, I read that to output ASCII/text data, one should use mode "w" and to output binary data, one should use "wb". But why the difference?

In either case, I’m just outputting a byte (char) array, right? And if I output a non-ASCII byte in ASCII mode, the program still outputs the correct byte.

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  1. Editorial Team
    Editorial Team
    2026-06-06T15:04:15+00:00Added an answer on June 6, 2026 at 3:04 pm

    Some operating systems – mostly named “windows” – don’t guarantee that they will read and write ascii to files exactly the way you pass it in. So on windows they actually map \r\n to \n. This is fine and transparent when reading and writing ascii. But it would trash a stream of binary data. Basically just always give windows the ‘b’ flag if you want it to faithfully read and write data to files exactly the way you passed it in.

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