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4.51 putwchar, putwchar_unlocked—write a wide character to standard output

Synopsis

     #include <wchar.h>
     wint_t putwchar(wchar_t wc);
     
     #include <wchar.h>
     wint_t putwchar_unlocked(wchar_t wc);
     
     #include <wchar.h>
     wint_t _putwchar_r(struct _reent *reent, wchar_t wc);
     
     #include <wchar.h>
     wint_t _putwchar_unlocked_r(struct _reent *reent, wchar_t wc);
     

Description
The putwchar function or macro is the wide-character equivalent of the putchar function. It writes the wide character wc to stdout.

putwchar_unlocked is a non-thread-safe version of putwchar. putwchar_unlocked may only safely be used within a scope protected by flockfile() (or ftrylockfile()) and funlockfile(). This function may safely be used in a multi-threaded program if and only if they are called while the invoking thread owns the (FILE *) object, as is the case after a successful call to the flockfile() or ftrylockfile() functions. If threads are disabled, then putwchar_unlocked is equivalent to putwchar.

The alternate functions _putwchar_r and _putwchar_unlocked_r are reentrant versions of the above. The extra argument reent is a pointer to a reentrancy structure.


Returns
If successful, putwchar returns its argument wc. If an error intervenes, the result is EOF. You can use `ferror(stdin)' to query for errors.

Portability
putwchar is required by C99.

putwchar_unlocked is a GNU extension.