This depends on operating system.
Windows uses two bytes per line, and most other operating systems use one.
This means there will be 6 bytes for Windows, or 3 bytes for everything else
This is because Windows uses a line ending of <CR><LF>, while other operating systems use just <LF>.
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Dfsc.sys is the Microsoft Windows DFS namespace client file. It is located in the folder C:\Windows\System32\drivers. Known file sizes on Windows 7 and Windows XP are 75,264 bytes and 78,336 bytes (or 74,752 bytes), respectively. It is a Windows core system file and is Microsoft signed.
A Stream is a sequence of bytes.
Seek to the end of the file (fseek) and check how many bytes are in the file If the byte count is zero the file is empty.
You mean source-file? The simplest format is one single main function: int main (void) { puts ("Hello, World"); return 0; }
windows support 2 file formats 1.text file 2.binary file in a text file in windows , each line is teminated with a carriage reurn followed by a linefeed character .but when a file is read by a c prog in text mode,c library converts carriage reurn/ linefeed character both in to a single linefeed character. but in case of binary file ,the prog will see both carriage return & linefeed character