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Software/C/C++

[C++] How to Use Sprintf

A format specification, which consists of optional and required fields, has the following form:

%[flags] [width] [.precision] [{h | l | I | I32 | I64}]type

Each field of the format specification is a single character or a number signifying a particular format option. The simplest format specification contains only the percent sign and a type character (for example, %s). If a percent sign is followed by a character that has no meaning as a format field, the character is copied to stdout. For example, to print a percent-sign character, use %%.

The optional fields, which appear before the type character, control other aspects of the formatting, as follows:

type

Required character that determines whether the associated argument is interpreted as a character, a string, or a number (see the printf Type Field Characters table.

flags

Optional character or characters that control justification of output and printing of signs, blanks, decimal points, and octal and hexadecimal prefixes (see the Flag Characters table). More than one flag can appear in a format specification.

width

Optional number that specifies the minimum number of characters output (see printf Width Specification).

precision

Optional number that specifies the maximum number of characters printed for all or part of the output field, or the minimum number of digits printed for integer values (see the How Precision Values Affect Type table).

h | l | I | I32 | I64

Optional prefixes to type-that specify the size of argument (see the Size Prefixes for printf and wprintf Format-Type Specifiers table).

Security Note   Ensure that format specification strings are not user-defined. For example, consider a program that prompts the user to enter his name and stores the input in a string variable called name. To print name, do not do this:

printf( name ); // Danger!  If name contains "%s", program will crash

Instead, do this:

printf( "%s", name );

Flag Directives

The first optional field of the format specification is flags. A flag directive is a character that justifies output and prints signs, blanks, decimal points, and octal and hexadecimal prefixes. More than one flag directive may appear in a format specification.

Flag Characters

Flag

Meaning

Default

?

Left align the result within the given field width.

Right align.

+

Prefix the output value with a sign (+ or ?) if the output value is of

a signed type.

Sign appears only for negative signed values (?).

0

If width is prefixed with 0, zeros are added until the minimum width is

reached. If 0 and ? appear, the 0 is ignored. If 0 is specified with an

integer format (i, u, x, X, o, d) the 0 is ignored.

No padding.

blank (' ')

Prefix the output value with a blank if the output value is signed and

positive; the blank is ignored if both the blank and + flags appear.

No blank appears.

#

When used with the o, x, or X format, the # flag prefixes any nonzero

output value with 0, 0x, or 0X, respectively.

No blank appears.

 

When used with the e, E, or f format, the # flag forces the output value

to contain a decimal point in all cases.

Decimal point appears only if digits follow it.

 

When used with the g or G format, the # flag forces the output value

to contain a decimal point in all cases and prevents the truncation of

trailing zeros.

Ignored when used with c, d, i, u, or s.

Decimal point appears only if digits follow it. Trailing zeros are truncated.

 

printf Width Specification

The second optional field of the format specification is the width specification. The width argument is a nonnegative decimal integer controlling the minimum number of characters printed. If the number of characters in the output value is less than the specified width, blanks are added to the left or the right of the values ? depending on whether the ? flag (for left alignment) is specified ? until the minimum width is reached. If width is prefixed with 0, zeros are added until the minimum width is reached (not useful for left-aligned numbers).

The width specification never causes a value to be truncated. If the number of characters in the output value is greater than the specified width, or if width is not given, all characters of the value are printed (subject to the precision specification).

If the width specification is an asterisk (*), an int argument from the argument list supplies the value. The width argument must precede the value being formatted in the argument list. A nonexistent or small field width does not cause the truncation of a field; if the result of a conversion is wider than the field width, the field expands to contain the conversion result.

Precision Specification

The third optional field of the format specification is the precision specification. It specifies a nonnegative decimal integer, preceded by a period (.), which specifies the number of characters to be printed, the number of decimal places, or the number of significant digits (see the How Precision Values Affect Type table). Unlike the width specification, the precision specification can cause either truncation of the output value or rounding of a floating-point value. If precision is specified as 0 and the value to be converted is 0, the result is no characters output, as shown below:

printf( "%.0d", 0 );      /* No characters output */

If the precision specification is an asterisk (*), an int argument from the argument list supplies the value. The precision argument must precede the value being formatted in the argument list.

The type determines the interpretation of precision and the default when precision is omitted, as shown in the following table.

How Precision Values Affect Type

Type

Meaning

Default

c, C

The precision has no effect.

Character is printed.

d, i, u, o, x, X

The precision specifies the minimum number of digits to be printed.

If the number of digits in the argument is less than precision, the output

value is padded on the left with zeros. The value is not truncated when

the number of digits exceeds precision.

Default precision is 1.

e, E

The precision specifies the number of digits to be printed after the decimal

point. The last printed digit is rounded.

Default precision is 6; if precision is 0 or the period (.) appears without a number following it, no decimal point is printed.

f

The precision value specifies the number of digits after the decimal point.

If a decimal point appears, at least one digit appears before it.

The value is rounded to the appropriate number of digits.

Default precision is 6; if precision is 0, or if the period (.) appears without a number following it, no decimal point is printed.

g, G

The precision specifies the maximum number of significant digits printed.

Six significant digits are printed, with any trailing zeros truncated.

s, S

The precision specifies the maximum number of characters to be printed.

Characters in excess of precision are not printed.

Characters are printed until a null character is encountered.

If the argument corresponding to a floating-point specifier is infinite, indefinite, or NAN, printf gives the following output.

Value

Output

+ infinity

1.#INFrandom-digits

? infinity

?1.#INFrandom-digits

Indefinite (same as quiet NaN)

digit.#INDrandom-digits

NAN

digit.#NANrandom-digits

printf Type Field Characters

The type character is the only required format field; it appears after any optional format fields. The type character determines whether the associated argument is interpreted as a character, string, or number. The types C and S, and the behavior of c and s with printf functions, are Microsoft extensions and are not ANSI compatible.

printf Type Field Characters

Character

Type

Output format

c

int or wint_t

When used with printf functions, specifies a single-byte

character; when used with wprintf functions, specifies

a wide character.

C

int or wint_t

When used with printf functions, specifies a wide

character; when used with wprintf functions,

specifies a single-byte character.

d

int

Signed decimal integer.

i

int

Signed decimal integer.

o

int

Unsigned octal integer.

u

int

Unsigned decimal integer.

x

int

Unsigned hexadecimal integer, using "abcdef."

X

int

Unsigned hexadecimal integer, using "ABCDEF."

e

double

Signed value having the form [ ? ]d.dddd e [sign]ddd

where d is a single decimal digit, dddd is one or more

decimal digits, ddd is exactly three decimal digits,

and sign is + or ?.

E

double

Identical to the e format except that E rather than e

introduces the exponent.

f

double

Signed value having the form [ ? ]dddd.dddd,

where dddd is one or more decimal digits.

The number of digits before the decimal point depends

on the magnitude of the number, and the number of

 digits after the decimal point depends on the requested

precision.

g

double

Signed value printed in f or e format, whichever is

more compact for the given value and precision.

The e format is used only when the exponent of the

value is less than ?4 or greater than or equal to the

precision argument. Trailing zeros are truncated, and

the decimal point appears only if one or more digits

follow it.

G

double

Identical to the g format, except that E, rather than e,

 introduces the exponent (where appropriate).

n

Pointer to integer

Number of characters successfully written so far to the

stream or buffer; this value is stored in the integer

whose address is given as the argument.

p

Pointer to void

Prints the address of the argument in hexadecimal

digits.

s

String

When used with printf functions, specifies

a single-byte?character string; when used with wprintf

functions, specifies a wide-character string.

Characters are printed up to the first null character or

until the precision value is reached.

S

String

When used with printf functions, specifies

a wide-character string; when used with wprintf

functions, specifies a single-byte?character string.

Characters are printed up to the first null character or

until the precision value is reached.

Note   If the argument corresponding to %s or %S is a null pointer, "(null)" will be printed.

Size Prefixes for printf and wprintf Format-Type Specifiers


To specify

Use prefix

With type specifier

long int

l (lowercase L)

d, i, o, x, or X

long unsigned int

l

o, u, x, or X

short int

h

d, i, o, x, or X<