 
					
				
		
 RobertoBozzolo
		
			RobertoBozzolo
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
			09-19-2016 07:44 AM
32 should indicate a conflict with another process owning the file. See here.
Decoding SDK errors can be done by means of FormatMessage () function. In your case you could do something like this:
int		error;
char	buf[512];
if ((DeleteFile ("temp-txt")) == 0) {
	sprintf (buf, "%s %s %s:", DateStr (), TimeStr (), __FUNCTION__);
	// GetLastError + FormatMessage
	// DWORD WINAPI GetLastError(void);
	// DWORD WINAPI FormatMessage (
	//	__in          DWORD dwFlags,
	//	__in          LPCVOID lpSource,
	//	__in          DWORD dwMessageId,
	//	__in          DWORD dwLanguageId,
	//	__out         LPTSTR lpBuffer,
	//	__in          DWORD nSize,
	//	__in          va_list* Arguments
	//);
	error = GetLastError ();
	FormatMessage (
		FORMAT_MESSAGE_FROM_SYSTEM,	// __in  DWORD dwFlags,
		NULL,				// __in  LPCVOID lpSource,
		error,				// __in  DWORD dwMessageId,
		0,				// __in  DWORD dwLanguageId,
		buf + strlen (buf),		// __out LPTSTR lpBuffer,
		511 - strlen (buf),		// __in  DWORD nSize,
		NULL				// __in  va_list* Arguments
	);
	sprintf (buf, "%s (%d)", buf, error);
	// Show error message
	MessagePopup ("Error!", buf);
}
09-19-2016 09:28 AM
I tried copying the code given by you and executed. It did not go into the function as Deletefile() is not returning zero. I had to remove the if() condition to make FormatMessage() work.
However the problem is resolved now. The file was not closing properly. So I had to use one more fclose(). And to close the file I used remove(). And it is working fine now.
Thanks for the replies. 🙂
09-23-2016 02:13 PM
As far as the conflict between the CVI and SDK versions of DeleteFile is concerned, you can always work around these collisions by setting the SDK_CONFLICT_PRIORITY macro.