When reading a file, I understand the last character provided is an EOF. Now, what happens, when I have an EOF character in that file?
How do
You need some context for this question. On Windows, there's the outdated DOS concept of a real "EOF character" -- Ctrl-Z. It is actually not possible to tell a "real" one from a "fake" one; a file with an embedded Ctrl-Z will contain some trailing hidden data from the perspective of a program which is actually looking for Ctrl-Z as an end of file character. Don't try to write this kind of code anymore -- it's not necessary.
In the portable C API and on UNIX, a 32-bit -1 is used to indicate end of file, which can't be a valid 8 or 16-bit character, so it's easy to tell the difference.