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28f540f4 1@node I/O on Streams, Low-Level I/O, I/O Overview, Top
34992338 2@c %MENU% High-level, portable I/O facilities
28f540f4 3@chapter Input/Output on Streams
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4@c fix an overfull:
5@tex
6\hyphenation{which-ever}
7@end tex
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8
9This chapter describes the functions for creating streams and performing
10input and output operations on them. As discussed in @ref{I/O
11Overview}, a stream is a fairly abstract, high-level concept
12representing a communications channel to a file, device, or process.
13
14@menu
15* Streams:: About the data type representing a stream.
19c3f208 16* Standard Streams:: Streams to the standard input and output
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17 devices are created for you.
18* Opening Streams:: How to create a stream to talk to a file.
19* Closing Streams:: Close a stream when you are finished with it.
20* Simple Output:: Unformatted output by characters and lines.
21* Character Input:: Unformatted input by characters and words.
22* Line Input:: Reading a line or a record from a stream.
23* Unreading:: Peeking ahead/pushing back input just read.
24* Block Input/Output:: Input and output operations on blocks of data.
25* Formatted Output:: @code{printf} and related functions.
26* Customizing Printf:: You can define new conversion specifiers for
27 @code{printf} and friends.
28* Formatted Input:: @code{scanf} and related functions.
29* EOF and Errors:: How you can tell if an I/O error happens.
460e040a 30* Error Recovery:: What you can do about errors.
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31* Binary Streams:: Some systems distinguish between text files
32 and binary files.
33* File Positioning:: About random-access streams.
f65fd747 34* Portable Positioning:: Random access on peculiar ISO C systems.
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35* Stream Buffering:: How to control buffering of streams.
36* Other Kinds of Streams:: Streams that do not necessarily correspond
19c3f208 37 to an open file.
0501d603 38* Formatted Messages:: Print strictly formatted messages.
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39@end menu
40
41@node Streams
42@section Streams
43
44For historical reasons, the type of the C data structure that represents
45a stream is called @code{FILE} rather than ``stream''. Since most of
46the library functions deal with objects of type @code{FILE *}, sometimes
47the term @dfn{file pointer} is also used to mean ``stream''. This leads
48to unfortunate confusion over terminology in many books on C. This
49manual, however, is careful to use the terms ``file'' and ``stream''
50only in the technical sense.
51@cindex file pointer
52
53@pindex stdio.h
54The @code{FILE} type is declared in the header file @file{stdio.h}.
55
56@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 57@comment ISO
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58@deftp {Data Type} FILE
59This is the data type used to represent stream objects. A @code{FILE}
60object holds all of the internal state information about the connection
61to the associated file, including such things as the file position
62indicator and buffering information. Each stream also has error and
63end-of-file status indicators that can be tested with the @code{ferror}
64and @code{feof} functions; see @ref{EOF and Errors}.
65@end deftp
66
67@code{FILE} objects are allocated and managed internally by the
68input/output library functions. Don't try to create your own objects of
69type @code{FILE}; let the library do it. Your programs should
70deal only with pointers to these objects (that is, @code{FILE *} values)
71rather than the objects themselves.
6d52618b 72@c !!! should say that FILE's have "No user-serviceable parts inside."
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73
74@node Standard Streams
75@section Standard Streams
76@cindex standard streams
77@cindex streams, standard
78
79When the @code{main} function of your program is invoked, it already has
80three predefined streams open and available for use. These represent
81the ``standard'' input and output channels that have been established
82for the process.
83
84These streams are declared in the header file @file{stdio.h}.
85@pindex stdio.h
86
87@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 88@comment ISO
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89@deftypevar {FILE *} stdin
90The @dfn{standard input} stream, which is the normal source of input for the
91program.
92@end deftypevar
93@cindex standard input stream
94
95@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 96@comment ISO
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97@deftypevar {FILE *} stdout
98The @dfn{standard output} stream, which is used for normal output from
99the program.
100@end deftypevar
101@cindex standard output stream
102
103@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 104@comment ISO
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105@deftypevar {FILE *} stderr
106The @dfn{standard error} stream, which is used for error messages and
107diagnostics issued by the program.
108@end deftypevar
109@cindex standard error stream
110
111In the GNU system, you can specify what files or processes correspond to
112these streams using the pipe and redirection facilities provided by the
113shell. (The primitives shells use to implement these facilities are
114described in @ref{File System Interface}.) Most other operating systems
115provide similar mechanisms, but the details of how to use them can vary.
116
117In the GNU C library, @code{stdin}, @code{stdout}, and @code{stderr} are
118normal variables which you can set just like any others. For example, to redirect
119the standard output to a file, you could do:
120
121@smallexample
122fclose (stdout);
123stdout = fopen ("standard-output-file", "w");
124@end smallexample
125
126Note however, that in other systems @code{stdin}, @code{stdout}, and
127@code{stderr} are macros that you cannot assign to in the normal way.
128But you can use @code{freopen} to get the effect of closing one and
129reopening it. @xref{Opening Streams}.
130
131@node Opening Streams
132@section Opening Streams
133
134@cindex opening a stream
135Opening a file with the @code{fopen} function creates a new stream and
136establishes a connection between the stream and a file. This may
19c3f208 137involve creating a new file.
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138
139@pindex stdio.h
140Everything described in this section is declared in the header file
141@file{stdio.h}.
142
143@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 144@comment ISO
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145@deftypefun {FILE *} fopen (const char *@var{filename}, const char *@var{opentype})
146The @code{fopen} function opens a stream for I/O to the file
147@var{filename}, and returns a pointer to the stream.
148
149The @var{opentype} argument is a string that controls how the file is
150opened and specifies attributes of the resulting stream. It must begin
151with one of the following sequences of characters:
152
153@table @samp
154@item r
155Open an existing file for reading only.
156
157@item w
158Open the file for writing only. If the file already exists, it is
159truncated to zero length. Otherwise a new file is created.
160
161@item a
162Open a file for append access; that is, writing at the end of file only.
163If the file already exists, its initial contents are unchanged and
164output to the stream is appended to the end of the file.
165Otherwise, a new, empty file is created.
166
167@item r+
168Open an existing file for both reading and writing. The initial contents
169of the file are unchanged and the initial file position is at the
170beginning of the file.
171
172@item w+
173Open a file for both reading and writing. If the file already exists, it
174is truncated to zero length. Otherwise, a new file is created.
175
176@item a+
177Open or create file for both reading and appending. If the file exists,
178its initial contents are unchanged. Otherwise, a new file is created.
179The initial file position for reading is at the beginning of the file,
180but output is always appended to the end of the file.
181@end table
182
183As you can see, @samp{+} requests a stream that can do both input and
f65fd747 184output. The ISO standard says that when using such a stream, you must
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185call @code{fflush} (@pxref{Stream Buffering}) or a file positioning
186function such as @code{fseek} (@pxref{File Positioning}) when switching
187from reading to writing or vice versa. Otherwise, internal buffers
188might not be emptied properly. The GNU C library does not have this
189limitation; you can do arbitrary reading and writing operations on a
190stream in whatever order.
191
192Additional characters may appear after these to specify flags for the
193call. Always put the mode (@samp{r}, @samp{w+}, etc.) first; that is
194the only part you are guaranteed will be understood by all systems.
195
196The GNU C library defines one additional character for use in
197@var{opentype}: the character @samp{x} insists on creating a new
198file---if a file @var{filename} already exists, @code{fopen} fails
0be8752b 199rather than opening it. If you use @samp{x} you are guaranteed that
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200you will not clobber an existing file. This is equivalent to the
201@code{O_EXCL} option to the @code{open} function (@pxref{Opening and
202Closing Files}).
203
204The character @samp{b} in @var{opentype} has a standard meaning; it
205requests a binary stream rather than a text stream. But this makes no
206difference in POSIX systems (including the GNU system). If both
207@samp{+} and @samp{b} are specified, they can appear in either order.
208@xref{Binary Streams}.
209
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210@cindex stream orientation
211@cindex orientation, stream
212If the @var{opentype} string contains the sequence
213@code{,ccs=@var{STRING}} then @var{STRING} is taken as the name of a
214coded character set and @code{fopen} will mark the stream as
215wide-oriented which appropriate conversion functions in place to convert
216from and to the character set @var{STRING} is place. Any other stream
217is opened initially unoriented and the orientation is decided with the
218first file operation. If the first operation is a wide character
219operation, the stream is not only marked as wide-oriented, also the
220conversion functions to convert to the coded character set used for the
221current locale are loaded. This will not change anymore from this point
222on even if the locale selected for the @code{LC_CTYPE} category is
223changed.
224
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225Any other characters in @var{opentype} are simply ignored. They may be
226meaningful in other systems.
227
228If the open fails, @code{fopen} returns a null pointer.
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229
230When the sources are compiling with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a
0be8752b 23132 bit machine this function is in fact @code{fopen64} since the LFS
a3a4a74e 232interface replaces transparently the old interface.
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233@end deftypefun
234
235You can have multiple streams (or file descriptors) pointing to the same
236file open at the same time. If you do only input, this works
237straightforwardly, but you must be careful if any output streams are
238included. @xref{Stream/Descriptor Precautions}. This is equally true
239whether the streams are in one program (not usual) or in several
240programs (which can easily happen). It may be advantageous to use the
241file locking facilities to avoid simultaneous access. @xref{File
242Locks}.
243
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244@comment stdio.h
245@comment Unix98
246@deftypefun {FILE *} fopen64 (const char *@var{filename}, const char *@var{opentype})
247This function is similar to @code{fopen} but the stream it returns a
248pointer for is opened using @code{open64}. Therefore this stream can be
0be8752b 249used even on files larger then @math{2^31} bytes on 32 bit machines.
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250
251Please note that the return type is still @code{FILE *}. There is no
252special @code{FILE} type for the LFS interface.
253
254If the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a 32
255bits machine this function is available under the name @code{fopen}
256and so transparently replaces the old interface.
257@end deftypefun
258
28f540f4 259@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 260@comment ISO
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261@deftypevr Macro int FOPEN_MAX
262The value of this macro is an integer constant expression that
263represents the minimum number of streams that the implementation
264guarantees can be open simultaneously. You might be able to open more
265than this many streams, but that is not guaranteed. The value of this
266constant is at least eight, which includes the three standard streams
267@code{stdin}, @code{stdout}, and @code{stderr}. In POSIX.1 systems this
268value is determined by the @code{OPEN_MAX} parameter; @pxref{General
269Limits}. In BSD and GNU, it is controlled by the @code{RLIMIT_NOFILE}
270resource limit; @pxref{Limits on Resources}.
271@end deftypevr
272
273@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 274@comment ISO
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275@deftypefun {FILE *} freopen (const char *@var{filename}, const char *@var{opentype}, FILE *@var{stream})
276This function is like a combination of @code{fclose} and @code{fopen}.
277It first closes the stream referred to by @var{stream}, ignoring any
278errors that are detected in the process. (Because errors are ignored,
279you should not use @code{freopen} on an output stream if you have
280actually done any output using the stream.) Then the file named by
281@var{filename} is opened with mode @var{opentype} as for @code{fopen},
282and associated with the same stream object @var{stream}.
283
284If the operation fails, a null pointer is returned; otherwise,
285@code{freopen} returns @var{stream}.
286
287@code{freopen} has traditionally been used to connect a standard stream
288such as @code{stdin} with a file of your own choice. This is useful in
289programs in which use of a standard stream for certain purposes is
290hard-coded. In the GNU C library, you can simply close the standard
291streams and open new ones with @code{fopen}. But other systems lack
292this ability, so using @code{freopen} is more portable.
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293
294When the sources are compiling with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a
0be8752b 29532 bit machine this function is in fact @code{freopen64} since the LFS
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296interface replaces transparently the old interface.
297@end deftypefun
298
299@comment stdio.h
300@comment Unix98
301@deftypefun {FILE *} freopen64 (const char *@var{filename}, const char *@var{opentype}, FILE *@var{stream})
302This function is similar to @code{freopen}. The only difference is that
0be8752b 303on 32 bit machine the stream returned is able to read beyond the
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304@math{2^31} bytes limits imposed by the normal interface. It should be
305noted that the stream pointed to by @var{stream} need not be opened
306using @code{fopen64} or @code{freopen64} since its mode is not important
307for this function.
308
309If the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a 32
310bits machine this function is available under the name @code{freopen}
311and so transparently replaces the old interface.
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312@end deftypefun
313
314
315@node Closing Streams
316@section Closing Streams
317
318@cindex closing a stream
319When a stream is closed with @code{fclose}, the connection between the
320stream and the file is cancelled. After you have closed a stream, you
321cannot perform any additional operations on it.
322
323@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 324@comment ISO
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325@deftypefun int fclose (FILE *@var{stream})
326This function causes @var{stream} to be closed and the connection to
327the corresponding file to be broken. Any buffered output is written
328and any buffered input is discarded. The @code{fclose} function returns
329a value of @code{0} if the file was closed successfully, and @code{EOF}
19c3f208 330if an error was detected.
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331
332It is important to check for errors when you call @code{fclose} to close
333an output stream, because real, everyday errors can be detected at this
334time. For example, when @code{fclose} writes the remaining buffered
335output, it might get an error because the disk is full. Even if you
336know the buffer is empty, errors can still occur when closing a file if
337you are using NFS.
338
339The function @code{fclose} is declared in @file{stdio.h}.
340@end deftypefun
341
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342To close all streams currently available the GNU C Library provides
343another function.
344
345@comment stdio.h
346@comment GNU
347@deftypefun int fcloseall (void)
348This function causes all open streams of the process to be closed and
349the connection to corresponding files to be broken. All buffered data
f2ea0f5b 350is written and any buffered input is discarded. The @code{fcloseall}
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351function returns a value of @code{0} if all the files were closed
352successfully, and @code{EOF} if an error was detected.
353
0be8752b 354This function should be used only in special situations, e.g., when an
6bc31da0 355error occurred and the program must be aborted. Normally each single
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356stream should be closed separately so that problems with individual
357streams can be identified. It is also problematic since the standard
358streams (@pxref{Standard Streams}) will also be closed.
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359
360The function @code{fcloseall} is declared in @file{stdio.h}.
361@end deftypefun
362
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363If the @code{main} function to your program returns, or if you call the
364@code{exit} function (@pxref{Normal Termination}), all open streams are
365automatically closed properly. If your program terminates in any other
366manner, such as by calling the @code{abort} function (@pxref{Aborting a
367Program}) or from a fatal signal (@pxref{Signal Handling}), open streams
368might not be closed properly. Buffered output might not be flushed and
369files may be incomplete. For more information on buffering of streams,
370see @ref{Stream Buffering}.
371
372@node Simple Output
373@section Simple Output by Characters or Lines
374
375@cindex writing to a stream, by characters
376This section describes functions for performing character- and
377line-oriented output.
378
379These functions are declared in the header file @file{stdio.h}.
380@pindex stdio.h
381
382@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 383@comment ISO
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384@deftypefun int fputc (int @var{c}, FILE *@var{stream})
385The @code{fputc} function converts the character @var{c} to type
19c3f208 386@code{unsigned char}, and writes it to the stream @var{stream}.
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387@code{EOF} is returned if a write error occurs; otherwise the
388character @var{c} is returned.
389@end deftypefun
390
391@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 392@comment ISO
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393@deftypefun int putc (int @var{c}, FILE *@var{stream})
394This is just like @code{fputc}, except that most systems implement it as
395a macro, making it faster. One consequence is that it may evaluate the
396@var{stream} argument more than once, which is an exception to the
397general rule for macros. @code{putc} is usually the best function to
398use for writing a single character.
399@end deftypefun
400
401@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 402@comment ISO
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403@deftypefun int putchar (int @var{c})
404The @code{putchar} function is equivalent to @code{putc} with
405@code{stdout} as the value of the @var{stream} argument.
406@end deftypefun
407
408@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 409@comment ISO
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410@deftypefun int fputs (const char *@var{s}, FILE *@var{stream})
411The function @code{fputs} writes the string @var{s} to the stream
412@var{stream}. The terminating null character is not written.
413This function does @emph{not} add a newline character, either.
414It outputs only the characters in the string.
415
416This function returns @code{EOF} if a write error occurs, and otherwise
417a non-negative value.
418
419For example:
420
421@smallexample
422fputs ("Are ", stdout);
423fputs ("you ", stdout);
424fputs ("hungry?\n", stdout);
425@end smallexample
426
427@noindent
428outputs the text @samp{Are you hungry?} followed by a newline.
429@end deftypefun
430
431@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 432@comment ISO
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433@deftypefun int puts (const char *@var{s})
434The @code{puts} function writes the string @var{s} to the stream
435@code{stdout} followed by a newline. The terminating null character of
436the string is not written. (Note that @code{fputs} does @emph{not}
437write a newline as this function does.)
438
439@code{puts} is the most convenient function for printing simple
440messages. For example:
441
442@smallexample
443puts ("This is a message.");
444@end smallexample
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445
446@noindent
447outputs the text @samp{This is a message.} followed by a newline.
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448@end deftypefun
449
450@comment stdio.h
451@comment SVID
452@deftypefun int putw (int @var{w}, FILE *@var{stream})
453This function writes the word @var{w} (that is, an @code{int}) to
454@var{stream}. It is provided for compatibility with SVID, but we
455recommend you use @code{fwrite} instead (@pxref{Block Input/Output}).
456@end deftypefun
457
458@node Character Input
459@section Character Input
460
461@cindex reading from a stream, by characters
462This section describes functions for performing character-oriented input.
463These functions are declared in the header file @file{stdio.h}.
464@pindex stdio.h
465
466These functions return an @code{int} value that is either a character of
467input, or the special value @code{EOF} (usually -1). It is important to
468store the result of these functions in a variable of type @code{int}
469instead of @code{char}, even when you plan to use it only as a
470character. Storing @code{EOF} in a @code{char} variable truncates its
471value to the size of a character, so that it is no longer
472distinguishable from the valid character @samp{(char) -1}. So always
473use an @code{int} for the result of @code{getc} and friends, and check
474for @code{EOF} after the call; once you've verified that the result is
475not @code{EOF}, you can be sure that it will fit in a @samp{char}
476variable without loss of information.
477
478@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 479@comment ISO
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480@deftypefun int fgetc (FILE *@var{stream})
481This function reads the next character as an @code{unsigned char} from
482the stream @var{stream} and returns its value, converted to an
483@code{int}. If an end-of-file condition or read error occurs,
19c3f208 484@code{EOF} is returned instead.
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485@end deftypefun
486
487@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 488@comment ISO
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489@deftypefun int getc (FILE *@var{stream})
490This is just like @code{fgetc}, except that it is permissible (and
491typical) for it to be implemented as a macro that evaluates the
492@var{stream} argument more than once. @code{getc} is often highly
493optimized, so it is usually the best function to use to read a single
494character.
495@end deftypefun
496
497@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 498@comment ISO
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499@deftypefun int getchar (void)
500The @code{getchar} function is equivalent to @code{getc} with @code{stdin}
501as the value of the @var{stream} argument.
502@end deftypefun
503
504Here is an example of a function that does input using @code{fgetc}. It
505would work just as well using @code{getc} instead, or using
506@code{getchar ()} instead of @w{@code{fgetc (stdin)}}.
507
508@smallexample
509int
510y_or_n_p (const char *question)
511@{
512 fputs (question, stdout);
513 while (1)
514 @{
515 int c, answer;
516 /* @r{Write a space to separate answer from question.} */
517 fputc (' ', stdout);
518 /* @r{Read the first character of the line.}
519 @r{This should be the answer character, but might not be.} */
520 c = tolower (fgetc (stdin));
521 answer = c;
522 /* @r{Discard rest of input line.} */
523 while (c != '\n' && c != EOF)
524 c = fgetc (stdin);
525 /* @r{Obey the answer if it was valid.} */
526 if (answer == 'y')
527 return 1;
528 if (answer == 'n')
529 return 0;
530 /* @r{Answer was invalid: ask for valid answer.} */
531 fputs ("Please answer y or n:", stdout);
532 @}
533@}
534@end smallexample
535
536@comment stdio.h
537@comment SVID
538@deftypefun int getw (FILE *@var{stream})
539This function reads a word (that is, an @code{int}) from @var{stream}.
540It's provided for compatibility with SVID. We recommend you use
541@code{fread} instead (@pxref{Block Input/Output}). Unlike @code{getc},
542any @code{int} value could be a valid result. @code{getw} returns
543@code{EOF} when it encounters end-of-file or an error, but there is no
544way to distinguish this from an input word with value -1.
545@end deftypefun
546
547@node Line Input
548@section Line-Oriented Input
549
550Since many programs interpret input on the basis of lines, it's
551convenient to have functions to read a line of text from a stream.
552
553Standard C has functions to do this, but they aren't very safe: null
554characters and even (for @code{gets}) long lines can confuse them. So
555the GNU library provides the nonstandard @code{getline} function that
556makes it easy to read lines reliably.
557
558Another GNU extension, @code{getdelim}, generalizes @code{getline}. It
559reads a delimited record, defined as everything through the next
560occurrence of a specified delimiter character.
561
562All these functions are declared in @file{stdio.h}.
563
564@comment stdio.h
565@comment GNU
566@deftypefun ssize_t getline (char **@var{lineptr}, size_t *@var{n}, FILE *@var{stream})
567This function reads an entire line from @var{stream}, storing the text
568(including the newline and a terminating null character) in a buffer
569and storing the buffer address in @code{*@var{lineptr}}.
570
571Before calling @code{getline}, you should place in @code{*@var{lineptr}}
572the address of a buffer @code{*@var{n}} bytes long, allocated with
573@code{malloc}. If this buffer is long enough to hold the line,
574@code{getline} stores the line in this buffer. Otherwise,
575@code{getline} makes the buffer bigger using @code{realloc}, storing the
576new buffer address back in @code{*@var{lineptr}} and the increased size
577back in @code{*@var{n}}.
578@xref{Unconstrained Allocation}.
579
580If you set @code{*@var{lineptr}} to a null pointer, and @code{*@var{n}}
581to zero, before the call, then @code{getline} allocates the initial
582buffer for you by calling @code{malloc}.
583
584In either case, when @code{getline} returns, @code{*@var{lineptr}} is
585a @code{char *} which points to the text of the line.
586
587When @code{getline} is successful, it returns the number of characters
588read (including the newline, but not including the terminating null).
589This value enables you to distinguish null characters that are part of
590the line from the null character inserted as a terminator.
591
592This function is a GNU extension, but it is the recommended way to read
593lines from a stream. The alternative standard functions are unreliable.
594
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595If an error occurs or end of file is reached without any bytes read,
596@code{getline} returns @code{-1}.
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597@end deftypefun
598
599@comment stdio.h
600@comment GNU
601@deftypefun ssize_t getdelim (char **@var{lineptr}, size_t *@var{n}, int @var{delimiter}, FILE *@var{stream})
602This function is like @code{getline} except that the character which
603tells it to stop reading is not necessarily newline. The argument
604@var{delimiter} specifies the delimiter character; @code{getdelim} keeps
605reading until it sees that character (or end of file).
606
607The text is stored in @var{lineptr}, including the delimiter character
608and a terminating null. Like @code{getline}, @code{getdelim} makes
609@var{lineptr} bigger if it isn't big enough.
610
611@code{getline} is in fact implemented in terms of @code{getdelim}, just
612like this:
613
614@smallexample
615ssize_t
616getline (char **lineptr, size_t *n, FILE *stream)
617@{
618 return getdelim (lineptr, n, '\n', stream);
619@}
620@end smallexample
621@end deftypefun
622
623@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 624@comment ISO
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625@deftypefun {char *} fgets (char *@var{s}, int @var{count}, FILE *@var{stream})
626The @code{fgets} function reads characters from the stream @var{stream}
627up to and including a newline character and stores them in the string
628@var{s}, adding a null character to mark the end of the string. You
629must supply @var{count} characters worth of space in @var{s}, but the
630number of characters read is at most @var{count} @minus{} 1. The extra
631character space is used to hold the null character at the end of the
632string.
633
634If the system is already at end of file when you call @code{fgets}, then
635the contents of the array @var{s} are unchanged and a null pointer is
636returned. A null pointer is also returned if a read error occurs.
637Otherwise, the return value is the pointer @var{s}.
638
639@strong{Warning:} If the input data has a null character, you can't tell.
640So don't use @code{fgets} unless you know the data cannot contain a null.
641Don't use it to read files edited by the user because, if the user inserts
642a null character, you should either handle it properly or print a clear
643error message. We recommend using @code{getline} instead of @code{fgets}.
644@end deftypefun
645
646@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 647@comment ISO
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648@deftypefn {Deprecated function} {char *} gets (char *@var{s})
649The function @code{gets} reads characters from the stream @code{stdin}
650up to the next newline character, and stores them in the string @var{s}.
651The newline character is discarded (note that this differs from the
652behavior of @code{fgets}, which copies the newline character into the
653string). If @code{gets} encounters a read error or end-of-file, it
654returns a null pointer; otherwise it returns @var{s}.
655
656@strong{Warning:} The @code{gets} function is @strong{very dangerous}
657because it provides no protection against overflowing the string
658@var{s}. The GNU library includes it for compatibility only. You
659should @strong{always} use @code{fgets} or @code{getline} instead. To
660remind you of this, the linker (if using GNU @code{ld}) will issue a
661warning whenever you use @code{gets}.
662@end deftypefn
663
664@node Unreading
665@section Unreading
666@cindex peeking at input
667@cindex unreading characters
668@cindex pushing input back
669
670In parser programs it is often useful to examine the next character in
671the input stream without removing it from the stream. This is called
672``peeking ahead'' at the input because your program gets a glimpse of
673the input it will read next.
674
675Using stream I/O, you can peek ahead at input by first reading it and
19c3f208 676then @dfn{unreading} it (also called @dfn{pushing it back} on the stream).
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677Unreading a character makes it available to be input again from the stream,
678by the next call to @code{fgetc} or other input function on that stream.
679
680@menu
681* Unreading Idea:: An explanation of unreading with pictures.
682* How Unread:: How to call @code{ungetc} to do unreading.
683@end menu
684
685@node Unreading Idea
686@subsection What Unreading Means
687
688Here is a pictorial explanation of unreading. Suppose you have a
689stream reading a file that contains just six characters, the letters
690@samp{foobar}. Suppose you have read three characters so far. The
691situation looks like this:
692
693@smallexample
694f o o b a r
695 ^
696@end smallexample
697
698@noindent
699so the next input character will be @samp{b}.
700
701@c @group Invalid outside @example
702If instead of reading @samp{b} you unread the letter @samp{o}, you get a
703situation like this:
704
705@smallexample
706f o o b a r
707 |
708 o--
709 ^
710@end smallexample
711
712@noindent
713so that the next input characters will be @samp{o} and @samp{b}.
714@c @end group
715
716@c @group
717If you unread @samp{9} instead of @samp{o}, you get this situation:
718
719@smallexample
720f o o b a r
721 |
722 9--
723 ^
724@end smallexample
725
726@noindent
727so that the next input characters will be @samp{9} and @samp{b}.
728@c @end group
729
730@node How Unread
731@subsection Using @code{ungetc} To Do Unreading
19c3f208 732
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733The function to unread a character is called @code{ungetc}, because it
734reverses the action of @code{getc}.
735
736@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 737@comment ISO
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738@deftypefun int ungetc (int @var{c}, FILE *@var{stream})
739The @code{ungetc} function pushes back the character @var{c} onto the
740input stream @var{stream}. So the next input from @var{stream} will
741read @var{c} before anything else.
742
743If @var{c} is @code{EOF}, @code{ungetc} does nothing and just returns
744@code{EOF}. This lets you call @code{ungetc} with the return value of
745@code{getc} without needing to check for an error from @code{getc}.
746
747The character that you push back doesn't have to be the same as the last
748character that was actually read from the stream. In fact, it isn't
749necessary to actually read any characters from the stream before
750unreading them with @code{ungetc}! But that is a strange way to write
751a program; usually @code{ungetc} is used only to unread a character
752that was just read from the same stream.
753
754The GNU C library only supports one character of pushback---in other
755words, it does not work to call @code{ungetc} twice without doing input
756in between. Other systems might let you push back multiple characters;
757then reading from the stream retrieves the characters in the reverse
758order that they were pushed.
759
760Pushing back characters doesn't alter the file; only the internal
761buffering for the stream is affected. If a file positioning function
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762(such as @code{fseek}, @code{fseeko} or @code{rewind}; @pxref{File
763Positioning}) is called, any pending pushed-back characters are
764discarded.
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765
766Unreading a character on a stream that is at end of file clears the
767end-of-file indicator for the stream, because it makes the character of
768input available. After you read that character, trying to read again
769will encounter end of file.
770@end deftypefun
771
772Here is an example showing the use of @code{getc} and @code{ungetc} to
773skip over whitespace characters. When this function reaches a
774non-whitespace character, it unreads that character to be seen again on
775the next read operation on the stream.
776
777@smallexample
778#include <stdio.h>
779#include <ctype.h>
780
781void
782skip_whitespace (FILE *stream)
783@{
784 int c;
785 do
786 /* @r{No need to check for @code{EOF} because it is not}
787 @r{@code{isspace}, and @code{ungetc} ignores @code{EOF}.} */
788 c = getc (stream);
789 while (isspace (c));
790 ungetc (c, stream);
791@}
792@end smallexample
793
794@node Block Input/Output
795@section Block Input/Output
796
797This section describes how to do input and output operations on blocks
798of data. You can use these functions to read and write binary data, as
799well as to read and write text in fixed-size blocks instead of by
800characters or lines.
801@cindex binary I/O to a stream
802@cindex block I/O to a stream
803@cindex reading from a stream, by blocks
804@cindex writing to a stream, by blocks
805
806Binary files are typically used to read and write blocks of data in the
807same format as is used to represent the data in a running program. In
808other words, arbitrary blocks of memory---not just character or string
809objects---can be written to a binary file, and meaningfully read in
810again by the same program.
811
812Storing data in binary form is often considerably more efficient than
813using the formatted I/O functions. Also, for floating-point numbers,
814the binary form avoids possible loss of precision in the conversion
815process. On the other hand, binary files can't be examined or modified
816easily using many standard file utilities (such as text editors), and
817are not portable between different implementations of the language, or
818different kinds of computers.
819
820These functions are declared in @file{stdio.h}.
821@pindex stdio.h
822
823@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 824@comment ISO
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825@deftypefun size_t fread (void *@var{data}, size_t @var{size}, size_t @var{count}, FILE *@var{stream})
826This function reads up to @var{count} objects of size @var{size} into
827the array @var{data}, from the stream @var{stream}. It returns the
828number of objects actually read, which might be less than @var{count} if
829a read error occurs or the end of the file is reached. This function
830returns a value of zero (and doesn't read anything) if either @var{size}
831or @var{count} is zero.
832
833If @code{fread} encounters end of file in the middle of an object, it
834returns the number of complete objects read, and discards the partial
835object. Therefore, the stream remains at the actual end of the file.
836@end deftypefun
837
838@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 839@comment ISO
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840@deftypefun size_t fwrite (const void *@var{data}, size_t @var{size}, size_t @var{count}, FILE *@var{stream})
841This function writes up to @var{count} objects of size @var{size} from
842the array @var{data}, to the stream @var{stream}. The return value is
843normally @var{count}, if the call succeeds. Any other value indicates
844some sort of error, such as running out of space.
845@end deftypefun
846
847@node Formatted Output
848@section Formatted Output
849
850@cindex format string, for @code{printf}
851@cindex template, for @code{printf}
852@cindex formatted output to a stream
853@cindex writing to a stream, formatted
854The functions described in this section (@code{printf} and related
855functions) provide a convenient way to perform formatted output. You
856call @code{printf} with a @dfn{format string} or @dfn{template string}
857that specifies how to format the values of the remaining arguments.
858
859Unless your program is a filter that specifically performs line- or
860character-oriented processing, using @code{printf} or one of the other
861related functions described in this section is usually the easiest and
862most concise way to perform output. These functions are especially
863useful for printing error messages, tables of data, and the like.
864
865@menu
866* Formatted Output Basics:: Some examples to get you started.
867* Output Conversion Syntax:: General syntax of conversion
868 specifications.
869* Table of Output Conversions:: Summary of output conversions and
870 what they do.
871* Integer Conversions:: Details about formatting of integers.
872* Floating-Point Conversions:: Details about formatting of
873 floating-point numbers.
874* Other Output Conversions:: Details about formatting of strings,
875 characters, pointers, and the like.
876* Formatted Output Functions:: Descriptions of the actual functions.
877* Dynamic Output:: Functions that allocate memory for the output.
878* Variable Arguments Output:: @code{vprintf} and friends.
879* Parsing a Template String:: What kinds of args does a given template
19c3f208 880 call for?
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881* Example of Parsing:: Sample program using @code{parse_printf_format}.
882@end menu
883
884@node Formatted Output Basics
885@subsection Formatted Output Basics
886
887The @code{printf} function can be used to print any number of arguments.
888The template string argument you supply in a call provides
889information not only about the number of additional arguments, but also
890about their types and what style should be used for printing them.
891
892Ordinary characters in the template string are simply written to the
893output stream as-is, while @dfn{conversion specifications} introduced by
894a @samp{%} character in the template cause subsequent arguments to be
895formatted and written to the output stream. For example,
896@cindex conversion specifications (@code{printf})
897
898@smallexample
899int pct = 37;
900char filename[] = "foo.txt";
901printf ("Processing of `%s' is %d%% finished.\nPlease be patient.\n",
902 filename, pct);
903@end smallexample
904
905@noindent
906produces output like
907
908@smallexample
909Processing of `foo.txt' is 37% finished.
910Please be patient.
911@end smallexample
912
913This example shows the use of the @samp{%d} conversion to specify that
914an @code{int} argument should be printed in decimal notation, the
915@samp{%s} conversion to specify printing of a string argument, and
916the @samp{%%} conversion to print a literal @samp{%} character.
917
918There are also conversions for printing an integer argument as an
919unsigned value in octal, decimal, or hexadecimal radix (@samp{%o},
920@samp{%u}, or @samp{%x}, respectively); or as a character value
921(@samp{%c}).
922
923Floating-point numbers can be printed in normal, fixed-point notation
924using the @samp{%f} conversion or in exponential notation using the
925@samp{%e} conversion. The @samp{%g} conversion uses either @samp{%e}
926or @samp{%f} format, depending on what is more appropriate for the
927magnitude of the particular number.
928
929You can control formatting more precisely by writing @dfn{modifiers}
930between the @samp{%} and the character that indicates which conversion
931to apply. These slightly alter the ordinary behavior of the conversion.
932For example, most conversion specifications permit you to specify a
933minimum field width and a flag indicating whether you want the result
934left- or right-justified within the field.
935
936The specific flags and modifiers that are permitted and their
937interpretation vary depending on the particular conversion. They're all
938described in more detail in the following sections. Don't worry if this
939all seems excessively complicated at first; you can almost always get
940reasonable free-format output without using any of the modifiers at all.
941The modifiers are mostly used to make the output look ``prettier'' in
942tables.
943
944@node Output Conversion Syntax
945@subsection Output Conversion Syntax
946
947This section provides details about the precise syntax of conversion
948specifications that can appear in a @code{printf} template
949string.
950
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951Characters in the template string that are not part of a conversion
952specification are printed as-is to the output stream. Multibyte
953character sequences (@pxref{Character Set Handling}) are permitted in a
954template string.
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955
956The conversion specifications in a @code{printf} template string have
957the general form:
958
959@example
dfd2257a 960% @r{[} @var{param-no} @r{$]} @var{flags} @var{width} @r{[} . @var{precision} @r{]} @var{type} @var{conversion}
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961@end example
962
963For example, in the conversion specifier @samp{%-10.8ld}, the @samp{-}
964is a flag, @samp{10} specifies the field width, the precision is
965@samp{8}, the letter @samp{l} is a type modifier, and @samp{d} specifies
966the conversion style. (This particular type specifier says to
967print a @code{long int} argument in decimal notation, with a minimum of
9688 digits left-justified in a field at least 10 characters wide.)
969
970In more detail, output conversion specifications consist of an
971initial @samp{%} character followed in sequence by:
972
973@itemize @bullet
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974@item
975An optional specification of the parameter used for this format.
e8b1163e 976Normally the parameters to the @code{printf} function are assigned to the
f2ea0f5b 977formats in the order of appearance in the format string. But in some
dfd2257a 978situations (such as message translation) this is not desirable and this
e8b1163e 979extension allows an explicit parameter to be specified.
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980
981The @var{param-no} part of the format must be an integer in the range of
9821 to the maximum number of arguments present to the function call. Some
983implementations limit this number to a certainly upper bound. The exact
984limit can be retrieved by the following constant.
985
986@defvr Macro NL_ARGMAX
987The value of @code{ARGMAX} is the maximum value allowed for the
988specification of an positional parameter in a @code{printf} call. The
989actual value in effect at runtime can be retrieved by using
990@code{sysconf} using the @code{_SC_NL_ARGMAX} parameter @pxref{Sysconf
991Definition}.
992
993Some system have a quite low limit such as @math{9} for @w{System V}
994systems. The GNU C library has no real limit.
995@end defvr
996
997If any of the formats has a specification for the parameter position all
998of them in the format string shall have one. Otherwise the behaviour is
999undefined.
1000
19c3f208 1001@item
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1002Zero or more @dfn{flag characters} that modify the normal behavior of
1003the conversion specification.
1004@cindex flag character (@code{printf})
1005
19c3f208 1006@item
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1007An optional decimal integer specifying the @dfn{minimum field width}.
1008If the normal conversion produces fewer characters than this, the field
1009is padded with spaces to the specified width. This is a @emph{minimum}
1010value; if the normal conversion produces more characters than this, the
1011field is @emph{not} truncated. Normally, the output is right-justified
1012within the field.
1013@cindex minimum field width (@code{printf})
1014
1015You can also specify a field width of @samp{*}. This means that the
1016next argument in the argument list (before the actual value to be
1017printed) is used as the field width. The value must be an @code{int}.
1018If the value is negative, this means to set the @samp{-} flag (see
1019below) and to use the absolute value as the field width.
1020
19c3f208 1021@item
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1022An optional @dfn{precision} to specify the number of digits to be
1023written for the numeric conversions. If the precision is specified, it
1024consists of a period (@samp{.}) followed optionally by a decimal integer
1025(which defaults to zero if omitted).
1026@cindex precision (@code{printf})
1027
1028You can also specify a precision of @samp{*}. This means that the next
1029argument in the argument list (before the actual value to be printed) is
1030used as the precision. The value must be an @code{int}, and is ignored
1031if it is negative. If you specify @samp{*} for both the field width and
1032precision, the field width argument precedes the precision argument.
1033Other C library versions may not recognize this syntax.
1034
1035@item
1036An optional @dfn{type modifier character}, which is used to specify the
1037data type of the corresponding argument if it differs from the default
1038type. (For example, the integer conversions assume a type of @code{int},
1039but you can specify @samp{h}, @samp{l}, or @samp{L} for other integer
1040types.)
1041@cindex type modifier character (@code{printf})
1042
1043@item
1044A character that specifies the conversion to be applied.
1045@end itemize
1046
19c3f208 1047The exact options that are permitted and how they are interpreted vary
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1048between the different conversion specifiers. See the descriptions of the
1049individual conversions for information about the particular options that
1050they use.
1051
1052With the @samp{-Wformat} option, the GNU C compiler checks calls to
1053@code{printf} and related functions. It examines the format string and
1054verifies that the correct number and types of arguments are supplied.
1055There is also a GNU C syntax to tell the compiler that a function you
19c3f208 1056write uses a @code{printf}-style format string.
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1057@xref{Function Attributes, , Declaring Attributes of Functions,
1058gcc.info, Using GNU CC}, for more information.
1059
1060@node Table of Output Conversions
1061@subsection Table of Output Conversions
1062@cindex output conversions, for @code{printf}
1063
1064Here is a table summarizing what all the different conversions do:
1065
1066@table @asis
1067@item @samp{%d}, @samp{%i}
1068Print an integer as a signed decimal number. @xref{Integer
1069Conversions}, for details. @samp{%d} and @samp{%i} are synonymous for
1070output, but are different when used with @code{scanf} for input
1071(@pxref{Table of Input Conversions}).
1072
1073@item @samp{%o}
1074Print an integer as an unsigned octal number. @xref{Integer
1075Conversions}, for details.
1076
1077@item @samp{%u}
1078Print an integer as an unsigned decimal number. @xref{Integer
1079Conversions}, for details.
1080
1081@item @samp{%x}, @samp{%X}
1082Print an integer as an unsigned hexadecimal number. @samp{%x} uses
1083lower-case letters and @samp{%X} uses upper-case. @xref{Integer
1084Conversions}, for details.
1085
1086@item @samp{%f}
1087Print a floating-point number in normal (fixed-point) notation.
1088@xref{Floating-Point Conversions}, for details.
1089
1090@item @samp{%e}, @samp{%E}
1091Print a floating-point number in exponential notation. @samp{%e} uses
1092lower-case letters and @samp{%E} uses upper-case. @xref{Floating-Point
1093Conversions}, for details.
1094
1095@item @samp{%g}, @samp{%G}
1096Print a floating-point number in either normal or exponential notation,
1097whichever is more appropriate for its magnitude. @samp{%g} uses
1098lower-case letters and @samp{%G} uses upper-case. @xref{Floating-Point
1099Conversions}, for details.
1100
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1101@item @samp{%a}, @samp{%A}
1102Print a floating-point number in a hexadecimal fractional notation which
1103the exponent to base 2 represented in decimal digits. @samp{%a} uses
1104lower-case letters and @samp{%A} uses upper-case. @xref{Floating-Point
1105Conversions}, for details.
1106
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1107@item @samp{%c}
1108Print a single character. @xref{Other Output Conversions}.
1109
1110@item @samp{%s}
1111Print a string. @xref{Other Output Conversions}.
1112
1113@item @samp{%p}
1114Print the value of a pointer. @xref{Other Output Conversions}.
1115
1116@item @samp{%n}
1117Get the number of characters printed so far. @xref{Other Output Conversions}.
1118Note that this conversion specification never produces any output.
1119
1120@item @samp{%m}
1121Print the string corresponding to the value of @code{errno}.
1122(This is a GNU extension.)
1123@xref{Other Output Conversions}.
1124
1125@item @samp{%%}
1126Print a literal @samp{%} character. @xref{Other Output Conversions}.
1127@end table
1128
1129If the syntax of a conversion specification is invalid, unpredictable
1130things will happen, so don't do this. If there aren't enough function
1131arguments provided to supply values for all the conversion
1132specifications in the template string, or if the arguments are not of
1133the correct types, the results are unpredictable. If you supply more
1134arguments than conversion specifications, the extra argument values are
1135simply ignored; this is sometimes useful.
1136
1137@node Integer Conversions
1138@subsection Integer Conversions
1139
1140This section describes the options for the @samp{%d}, @samp{%i},
1141@samp{%o}, @samp{%u}, @samp{%x}, and @samp{%X} conversion
1142specifications. These conversions print integers in various formats.
1143
1144The @samp{%d} and @samp{%i} conversion specifications both print an
1145@code{int} argument as a signed decimal number; while @samp{%o},
1146@samp{%u}, and @samp{%x} print the argument as an unsigned octal,
1147decimal, or hexadecimal number (respectively). The @samp{%X} conversion
1148specification is just like @samp{%x} except that it uses the characters
1149@samp{ABCDEF} as digits instead of @samp{abcdef}.
1150
1151The following flags are meaningful:
1152
1153@table @asis
1154@item @samp{-}
1155Left-justify the result in the field (instead of the normal
1156right-justification).
1157
1158@item @samp{+}
1159For the signed @samp{%d} and @samp{%i} conversions, print a
1160plus sign if the value is positive.
1161
1162@item @samp{ }
1163For the signed @samp{%d} and @samp{%i} conversions, if the result
1164doesn't start with a plus or minus sign, prefix it with a space
1165character instead. Since the @samp{+} flag ensures that the result
1166includes a sign, this flag is ignored if you supply both of them.
1167
1168@item @samp{#}
1169For the @samp{%o} conversion, this forces the leading digit to be
1170@samp{0}, as if by increasing the precision. For @samp{%x} or
1171@samp{%X}, this prefixes a leading @samp{0x} or @samp{0X} (respectively)
1172to the result. This doesn't do anything useful for the @samp{%d},
1173@samp{%i}, or @samp{%u} conversions. Using this flag produces output
1174which can be parsed by the @code{strtoul} function (@pxref{Parsing of
1175Integers}) and @code{scanf} with the @samp{%i} conversion
1176(@pxref{Numeric Input Conversions}).
1177
1178@item @samp{'}
1179Separate the digits into groups as specified by the locale specified for
1180the @code{LC_NUMERIC} category; @pxref{General Numeric}. This flag is a
1181GNU extension.
1182
1183@item @samp{0}
1184Pad the field with zeros instead of spaces. The zeros are placed after
1185any indication of sign or base. This flag is ignored if the @samp{-}
1186flag is also specified, or if a precision is specified.
1187@end table
1188
1189If a precision is supplied, it specifies the minimum number of digits to
1190appear; leading zeros are produced if necessary. If you don't specify a
1191precision, the number is printed with as many digits as it needs. If
1192you convert a value of zero with an explicit precision of zero, then no
1193characters at all are produced.
1194
1195Without a type modifier, the corresponding argument is treated as an
1196@code{int} (for the signed conversions @samp{%i} and @samp{%d}) or
1197@code{unsigned int} (for the unsigned conversions @samp{%o}, @samp{%u},
1198@samp{%x}, and @samp{%X}). Recall that since @code{printf} and friends
1199are variadic, any @code{char} and @code{short} arguments are
1200automatically converted to @code{int} by the default argument
1201promotions. For arguments of other integer types, you can use these
1202modifiers:
1203
1204@table @samp
cc3fa755
UD
1205@item hh
1206Specifies that the argument is a @code{signed char} or @code{unsigned
1207char}, as appropriate. A @code{char} argument is converted to an
1208@code{int} or @code{unsigned int} by the default argument promotions
1209anyway, but the @samp{h} modifier says to convert it back to a
1210@code{char} again.
1211
ec751a23 1212This modifier was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
e852e889 1213
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1214@item h
1215Specifies that the argument is a @code{short int} or @code{unsigned
1216short int}, as appropriate. A @code{short} argument is converted to an
1217@code{int} or @code{unsigned int} by the default argument promotions
1218anyway, but the @samp{h} modifier says to convert it back to a
1219@code{short} again.
1220
e852e889
UD
1221@item j
1222Specifies that the argument is a @code{intmax_t} or @code{uintmax_t}, as
1223appropriate.
1224
ec751a23 1225This modifier was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
e852e889 1226
28f540f4
RM
1227@item l
1228Specifies that the argument is a @code{long int} or @code{unsigned long
1229int}, as appropriate. Two @samp{l} characters is like the @samp{L}
1230modifier, below.
1231
1232@item L
1233@itemx ll
1234@itemx q
1235Specifies that the argument is a @code{long long int}. (This type is
1236an extension supported by the GNU C compiler. On systems that don't
1237support extra-long integers, this is the same as @code{long int}.)
1238
1239The @samp{q} modifier is another name for the same thing, which comes
1240from 4.4 BSD; a @w{@code{long long int}} is sometimes called a ``quad''
1241@code{int}.
1242
e852e889
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1243@item t
1244Specifies that the argument is a @code{ptrdiff_t}.
1245
ec751a23 1246This modifier was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
e852e889
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1247
1248@item z
1249@itemx Z
1250Specifies that the argument is a @code{size_t}.
1251
ec751a23 1252@samp{z} was introduced in @w{ISO C99}. @samp{Z} is a GNU extension
0be8752b 1253predating this addition and should not be used in new code.
28f540f4
RM
1254@end table
1255
1256Here is an example. Using the template string:
1257
1258@smallexample
1259"|%5d|%-5d|%+5d|%+-5d|% 5d|%05d|%5.0d|%5.2d|%d|\n"
1260@end smallexample
1261
1262@noindent
1263to print numbers using the different options for the @samp{%d}
1264conversion gives results like:
1265
1266@smallexample
1267| 0|0 | +0|+0 | 0|00000| | 00|0|
1268| 1|1 | +1|+1 | 1|00001| 1| 01|1|
1269| -1|-1 | -1|-1 | -1|-0001| -1| -01|-1|
1270|100000|100000|+100000| 100000|100000|100000|100000|100000|
1271@end smallexample
1272
1273In particular, notice what happens in the last case where the number
1274is too large to fit in the minimum field width specified.
1275
1276Here are some more examples showing how unsigned integers print under
1277various format options, using the template string:
1278
1279@smallexample
1280"|%5u|%5o|%5x|%5X|%#5o|%#5x|%#5X|%#10.8x|\n"
1281@end smallexample
1282
1283@smallexample
1284| 0| 0| 0| 0| 0| 0x0| 0X0|0x00000000|
1285| 1| 1| 1| 1| 01| 0x1| 0X1|0x00000001|
1286|100000|303240|186a0|186A0|0303240|0x186a0|0X186A0|0x000186a0|
1287@end smallexample
1288
1289
1290@node Floating-Point Conversions
1291@subsection Floating-Point Conversions
1292
1293This section discusses the conversion specifications for floating-point
1294numbers: the @samp{%f}, @samp{%e}, @samp{%E}, @samp{%g}, and @samp{%G}
1295conversions.
1296
1297The @samp{%f} conversion prints its argument in fixed-point notation,
1298producing output of the form
1299@w{[@code{-}]@var{ddd}@code{.}@var{ddd}},
1300where the number of digits following the decimal point is controlled
1301by the precision you specify.
1302
1303The @samp{%e} conversion prints its argument in exponential notation,
1304producing output of the form
1305@w{[@code{-}]@var{d}@code{.}@var{ddd}@code{e}[@code{+}|@code{-}]@var{dd}}.
1306Again, the number of digits following the decimal point is controlled by
1307the precision. The exponent always contains at least two digits. The
1308@samp{%E} conversion is similar but the exponent is marked with the letter
1309@samp{E} instead of @samp{e}.
1310
1311The @samp{%g} and @samp{%G} conversions print the argument in the style
1312of @samp{%e} or @samp{%E} (respectively) if the exponent would be less
1313than -4 or greater than or equal to the precision; otherwise they use the
1314@samp{%f} style. Trailing zeros are removed from the fractional portion
1315of the result and a decimal-point character appears only if it is
1316followed by a digit.
1317
2f6d1f1b 1318The @samp{%a} and @samp{%A} conversions are meant for representing
0be8752b 1319floating-point numbers exactly in textual form so that they can be
2f6d1f1b
UD
1320exchanged as texts between different programs and/or machines. The
1321numbers are represented is the form
1322@w{[@code{-}]@code{0x}@var{h}@code{.}@var{hhh}@code{p}[@code{+}|@code{-}]@var{dd}}.
1323At the left of the decimal-point character exactly one digit is print.
91ea72b7 1324This character is only @code{0} if the number is denormalized.
49c091e5 1325Otherwise the value is unspecified; it is implementation dependent how many
2f6d1f1b
UD
1326bits are used. The number of hexadecimal digits on the right side of
1327the decimal-point character is equal to the precision. If the precision
1328is zero it is determined to be large enough to provide an exact
1329representation of the number (or it is large enough to distinguish two
1330adjacent values if the @code{FLT_RADIX} is not a power of 2,
91ea72b7 1331@pxref{Floating Point Parameters}). For the @samp{%a} conversion
2f6d1f1b
UD
1332lower-case characters are used to represent the hexadecimal number and
1333the prefix and exponent sign are printed as @code{0x} and @code{p}
1334respectively. Otherwise upper-case characters are used and @code{0X}
1335and @code{P} are used for the representation of prefix and exponent
1336string. The exponent to the base of two is printed as a decimal number
1337using at least one digit but at most as many digits as necessary to
1338represent the value exactly.
1339
1340If the value to be printed represents infinity or a NaN, the output is
1341@w{[@code{-}]@code{inf}} or @code{nan} respectively if the conversion
1342specifier is @samp{%a}, @samp{%e}, @samp{%f}, or @samp{%g} and it is
1343@w{[@code{-}]@code{INF}} or @code{NAN} respectively if the conversion is
1344@samp{%A}, @samp{%E}, or @samp{%G}.
1345
28f540f4
RM
1346The following flags can be used to modify the behavior:
1347
1348@comment We use @asis instead of @samp so we can have ` ' as an item.
1349@table @asis
1350@item @samp{-}
1351Left-justify the result in the field. Normally the result is
1352right-justified.
1353
1354@item @samp{+}
1355Always include a plus or minus sign in the result.
1356
1357@item @samp{ }
1358If the result doesn't start with a plus or minus sign, prefix it with a
1359space instead. Since the @samp{+} flag ensures that the result includes
1360a sign, this flag is ignored if you supply both of them.
1361
1362@item @samp{#}
1363Specifies that the result should always include a decimal point, even
1364if no digits follow it. For the @samp{%g} and @samp{%G} conversions,
1365this also forces trailing zeros after the decimal point to be left
1366in place where they would otherwise be removed.
1367
1368@item @samp{'}
1369Separate the digits of the integer part of the result into groups as
1370specified by the locale specified for the @code{LC_NUMERIC} category;
1371@pxref{General Numeric}. This flag is a GNU extension.
1372
1373@item @samp{0}
1374Pad the field with zeros instead of spaces; the zeros are placed
1375after any sign. This flag is ignored if the @samp{-} flag is also
1376specified.
1377@end table
1378
1379The precision specifies how many digits follow the decimal-point
1380character for the @samp{%f}, @samp{%e}, and @samp{%E} conversions. For
1381these conversions, the default precision is @code{6}. If the precision
1382is explicitly @code{0}, this suppresses the decimal point character
1383entirely. For the @samp{%g} and @samp{%G} conversions, the precision
1384specifies how many significant digits to print. Significant digits are
1385the first digit before the decimal point, and all the digits after it.
91ea72b7 1386If the precision is @code{0} or not specified for @samp{%g} or @samp{%G},
28f540f4
RM
1387it is treated like a value of @code{1}. If the value being printed
1388cannot be expressed accurately in the specified number of digits, the
1389value is rounded to the nearest number that fits.
1390
1391Without a type modifier, the floating-point conversions use an argument
1392of type @code{double}. (By the default argument promotions, any
1393@code{float} arguments are automatically converted to @code{double}.)
1394The following type modifier is supported:
1395
1396@table @samp
1397@item L
1398An uppercase @samp{L} specifies that the argument is a @code{long
1399double}.
1400@end table
1401
1402Here are some examples showing how numbers print using the various
1403floating-point conversions. All of the numbers were printed using
1404this template string:
1405
1406@smallexample
2f6d1f1b 1407"|%13.4a|%13.4f|%13.4e|%13.4g|\n"
28f540f4
RM
1408@end smallexample
1409
1410Here is the output:
1411
1412@smallexample
2f6d1f1b
UD
1413| 0x0.0000p+0| 0.0000| 0.0000e+00| 0|
1414| 0x1.0000p-1| 0.5000| 5.0000e-01| 0.5|
1415| 0x1.0000p+0| 1.0000| 1.0000e+00| 1|
1416| -0x1.0000p+0| -1.0000| -1.0000e+00| -1|
1417| 0x1.9000p+6| 100.0000| 1.0000e+02| 100|
1418| 0x1.f400p+9| 1000.0000| 1.0000e+03| 1000|
1419| 0x1.3880p+13| 10000.0000| 1.0000e+04| 1e+04|
1420| 0x1.81c8p+13| 12345.0000| 1.2345e+04| 1.234e+04|
1421| 0x1.86a0p+16| 100000.0000| 1.0000e+05| 1e+05|
1422| 0x1.e240p+16| 123456.0000| 1.2346e+05| 1.235e+05|
28f540f4
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1423@end smallexample
1424
1425Notice how the @samp{%g} conversion drops trailing zeros.
1426
1427@node Other Output Conversions
1428@subsection Other Output Conversions
1429
1430This section describes miscellaneous conversions for @code{printf}.
1431
1432The @samp{%c} conversion prints a single character. The @code{int}
1433argument is first converted to an @code{unsigned char}. The @samp{-}
1434flag can be used to specify left-justification in the field, but no
1435other flags are defined, and no precision or type modifier can be given.
1436For example:
1437
1438@smallexample
1439printf ("%c%c%c%c%c", 'h', 'e', 'l', 'l', 'o');
1440@end smallexample
1441
1442@noindent
1443prints @samp{hello}.
1444
1445The @samp{%s} conversion prints a string. The corresponding argument
1446must be of type @code{char *} (or @code{const char *}). A precision can
1447be specified to indicate the maximum number of characters to write;
1448otherwise characters in the string up to but not including the
1449terminating null character are written to the output stream. The
1450@samp{-} flag can be used to specify left-justification in the field,
1451but no other flags or type modifiers are defined for this conversion.
1452For example:
1453
1454@smallexample
1455printf ("%3s%-6s", "no", "where");
1456@end smallexample
1457
1458@noindent
1459prints @samp{ nowhere }.
1460
1461If you accidentally pass a null pointer as the argument for a @samp{%s}
1462conversion, the GNU library prints it as @samp{(null)}. We think this
1463is more useful than crashing. But it's not good practice to pass a null
1464argument intentionally.
1465
1466The @samp{%m} conversion prints the string corresponding to the error
1467code in @code{errno}. @xref{Error Messages}. Thus:
1468
1469@smallexample
1470fprintf (stderr, "can't open `%s': %m\n", filename);
1471@end smallexample
1472
1473@noindent
1474is equivalent to:
1475
1476@smallexample
1477fprintf (stderr, "can't open `%s': %s\n", filename, strerror (errno));
1478@end smallexample
1479
1480@noindent
1481The @samp{%m} conversion is a GNU C library extension.
1482
1483The @samp{%p} conversion prints a pointer value. The corresponding
1484argument must be of type @code{void *}. In practice, you can use any
1485type of pointer.
1486
1487In the GNU system, non-null pointers are printed as unsigned integers,
1488as if a @samp{%#x} conversion were used. Null pointers print as
1489@samp{(nil)}. (Pointers might print differently in other systems.)
1490
1491For example:
1492
1493@smallexample
1494printf ("%p", "testing");
1495@end smallexample
1496
1497@noindent
1498prints @samp{0x} followed by a hexadecimal number---the address of the
1499string constant @code{"testing"}. It does not print the word
1500@samp{testing}.
1501
1502You can supply the @samp{-} flag with the @samp{%p} conversion to
1503specify left-justification, but no other flags, precision, or type
1504modifiers are defined.
1505
1506The @samp{%n} conversion is unlike any of the other output conversions.
1507It uses an argument which must be a pointer to an @code{int}, but
1508instead of printing anything it stores the number of characters printed
1509so far by this call at that location. The @samp{h} and @samp{l} type
1510modifiers are permitted to specify that the argument is of type
1511@code{short int *} or @code{long int *} instead of @code{int *}, but no
1512flags, field width, or precision are permitted.
1513
1514For example,
1515
1516@smallexample
1517int nchar;
1518printf ("%d %s%n\n", 3, "bears", &nchar);
1519@end smallexample
1520
1521@noindent
1522prints:
1523
1524@smallexample
15253 bears
1526@end smallexample
1527
1528@noindent
19c3f208 1529and sets @code{nchar} to @code{7}, because @samp{3 bears} is seven
28f540f4
RM
1530characters.
1531
1532
1533The @samp{%%} conversion prints a literal @samp{%} character. This
1534conversion doesn't use an argument, and no flags, field width,
1535precision, or type modifiers are permitted.
1536
1537
1538@node Formatted Output Functions
1539@subsection Formatted Output Functions
1540
1541This section describes how to call @code{printf} and related functions.
1542Prototypes for these functions are in the header file @file{stdio.h}.
1543Because these functions take a variable number of arguments, you
1544@emph{must} declare prototypes for them before using them. Of course,
1545the easiest way to make sure you have all the right prototypes is to
1546just include @file{stdio.h}.
1547@pindex stdio.h
1548
1549@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 1550@comment ISO
28f540f4
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1551@deftypefun int printf (const char *@var{template}, @dots{})
1552The @code{printf} function prints the optional arguments under the
1553control of the template string @var{template} to the stream
1554@code{stdout}. It returns the number of characters printed, or a
1555negative value if there was an output error.
1556@end deftypefun
1557
1558@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 1559@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
1560@deftypefun int fprintf (FILE *@var{stream}, const char *@var{template}, @dots{})
1561This function is just like @code{printf}, except that the output is
1562written to the stream @var{stream} instead of @code{stdout}.
1563@end deftypefun
1564
1565@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 1566@comment ISO
28f540f4
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1567@deftypefun int sprintf (char *@var{s}, const char *@var{template}, @dots{})
1568This is like @code{printf}, except that the output is stored in the character
1569array @var{s} instead of written to a stream. A null character is written
1570to mark the end of the string.
1571
1572The @code{sprintf} function returns the number of characters stored in
1573the array @var{s}, not including the terminating null character.
1574
1575The behavior of this function is undefined if copying takes place
1576between objects that overlap---for example, if @var{s} is also given
1577as an argument to be printed under control of the @samp{%s} conversion.
1578@xref{Copying and Concatenation}.
1579
1580@strong{Warning:} The @code{sprintf} function can be @strong{dangerous}
1581because it can potentially output more characters than can fit in the
1582allocation size of the string @var{s}. Remember that the field width
1583given in a conversion specification is only a @emph{minimum} value.
1584
1585To avoid this problem, you can use @code{snprintf} or @code{asprintf},
1586described below.
1587@end deftypefun
1588
1589@comment stdio.h
1590@comment GNU
1591@deftypefun int snprintf (char *@var{s}, size_t @var{size}, const char *@var{template}, @dots{})
1592The @code{snprintf} function is similar to @code{sprintf}, except that
1593the @var{size} argument specifies the maximum number of characters to
1594produce. The trailing null character is counted towards this limit, so
1595you should allocate at least @var{size} characters for the string @var{s}.
1596
fe7bdd63 1597The return value is the number of characters which would be generated
da2d1bc5
UD
1598for the given input, excluding the trailing null. If this value is
1599greater or equal to @var{size}, not all characters from the result have
1600been stored in @var{s}. You should try again with a bigger output
1601string. Here is an example of doing this:
28f540f4
RM
1602
1603@smallexample
1604@group
1605/* @r{Construct a message describing the value of a variable}
1606 @r{whose name is @var{name} and whose value is @var{value}.} */
1607char *
1608make_message (char *name, char *value)
1609@{
1610 /* @r{Guess we need no more than 100 chars of space.} */
1611 int size = 100;
1612 char *buffer = (char *) xmalloc (size);
4cca6b86 1613 int nchars;
28f540f4
RM
1614@end group
1615@group
7ba73c63
UD
1616 if (buffer == NULL)
1617 return NULL;
1618
4cca6b86
UD
1619 /* @r{Try to print in the allocated space.} */
1620 nchars = snprintf (buffer, size, "value of %s is %s",
1621 name, value);
1622@end group
1623@group
fe7bdd63 1624 if (nchars >= size)
28f540f4 1625 @{
4b8f94d3 1626 /* @r{Reallocate buffer now that we know
838e5ffe 1627 how much space is needed.} */
4cca6b86
UD
1628 buffer = (char *) xrealloc (buffer, nchars + 1);
1629
7ba73c63
UD
1630 if (buffer != NULL)
1631 /* @r{Try again.} */
1632 snprintf (buffer, size, "value of %s is %s",
1633 name, value);
28f540f4 1634 @}
4cca6b86
UD
1635 /* @r{The last call worked, return the string.} */
1636 return buffer;
28f540f4
RM
1637@}
1638@end group
1639@end smallexample
1640
1641In practice, it is often easier just to use @code{asprintf}, below.
fb971363
UD
1642
1643@strong{Attention:} In the GNU C library version 2.0 the return value
1644is the number of characters stored, not including the terminating null.
1645If this value equals @code{@var{size} - 1}, then there was not enough
0ea554bf 1646space in @var{s} for all the output. This change was necessary with
ec751a23 1647the adoption of snprintf by ISO C99.
28f540f4
RM
1648@end deftypefun
1649
1650@node Dynamic Output
1651@subsection Dynamically Allocating Formatted Output
1652
1653The functions in this section do formatted output and place the results
1654in dynamically allocated memory.
1655
1656@comment stdio.h
1657@comment GNU
1658@deftypefun int asprintf (char **@var{ptr}, const char *@var{template}, @dots{})
1659This function is similar to @code{sprintf}, except that it dynamically
1660allocates a string (as with @code{malloc}; @pxref{Unconstrained
1661Allocation}) to hold the output, instead of putting the output in a
1662buffer you allocate in advance. The @var{ptr} argument should be the
1663address of a @code{char *} object, and @code{asprintf} stores a pointer
1664to the newly allocated string at that location.
1665
7ba73c63
UD
1666The return value is the number of characters allocated for the buffer, or
1667less than zero if an error occured. Usually this means that the buffer
1668could not be allocated.
1669
28f540f4
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1670Here is how to use @code{asprintf} to get the same result as the
1671@code{snprintf} example, but more easily:
1672
1673@smallexample
1674/* @r{Construct a message describing the value of a variable}
1675 @r{whose name is @var{name} and whose value is @var{value}.} */
1676char *
1677make_message (char *name, char *value)
1678@{
1679 char *result;
7ba73c63
UD
1680 if (asprintf (&result, "value of %s is %s", name, value) < 0)
1681 return NULL;
28f540f4
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1682 return result;
1683@}
1684@end smallexample
1685@end deftypefun
1686
1687@comment stdio.h
1688@comment GNU
1689@deftypefun int obstack_printf (struct obstack *@var{obstack}, const char *@var{template}, @dots{})
1690This function is similar to @code{asprintf}, except that it uses the
1691obstack @var{obstack} to allocate the space. @xref{Obstacks}.
1692
1693The characters are written onto the end of the current object.
1694To get at them, you must finish the object with @code{obstack_finish}
1695(@pxref{Growing Objects}).@refill
1696@end deftypefun
1697
1698@node Variable Arguments Output
1699@subsection Variable Arguments Output Functions
1700
1701The functions @code{vprintf} and friends are provided so that you can
1702define your own variadic @code{printf}-like functions that make use of
1703the same internals as the built-in formatted output functions.
1704
1705The most natural way to define such functions would be to use a language
1706construct to say, ``Call @code{printf} and pass this template plus all
1707of my arguments after the first five.'' But there is no way to do this
1708in C, and it would be hard to provide a way, since at the C language
1709level there is no way to tell how many arguments your function received.
1710
1711Since that method is impossible, we provide alternative functions, the
1712@code{vprintf} series, which lets you pass a @code{va_list} to describe
1713``all of my arguments after the first five.''
1714
19c3f208 1715When it is sufficient to define a macro rather than a real function,
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1716the GNU C compiler provides a way to do this much more easily with macros.
1717For example:
1718
1719@smallexample
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1720#define myprintf(a, b, c, d, e, rest...) \
1721 printf (mytemplate , ## rest...)
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1722@end smallexample
1723
1724@noindent
1725@xref{Macro Varargs, , Macros with Variable Numbers of Arguments,
1726gcc.info, Using GNU CC}, for details. But this is limited to macros,
1727and does not apply to real functions at all.
1728
1729Before calling @code{vprintf} or the other functions listed in this
1730section, you @emph{must} call @code{va_start} (@pxref{Variadic
1731Functions}) to initialize a pointer to the variable arguments. Then you
1732can call @code{va_arg} to fetch the arguments that you want to handle
1733yourself. This advances the pointer past those arguments.
1734
1735Once your @code{va_list} pointer is pointing at the argument of your
1736choice, you are ready to call @code{vprintf}. That argument and all
1737subsequent arguments that were passed to your function are used by
1738@code{vprintf} along with the template that you specified separately.
1739
1740In some other systems, the @code{va_list} pointer may become invalid
1741after the call to @code{vprintf}, so you must not use @code{va_arg}
1742after you call @code{vprintf}. Instead, you should call @code{va_end}
1743to retire the pointer from service. However, you can safely call
1744@code{va_start} on another pointer variable and begin fetching the
1745arguments again through that pointer. Calling @code{vprintf} does not
1746destroy the argument list of your function, merely the particular
1747pointer that you passed to it.
1748
1749GNU C does not have such restrictions. You can safely continue to fetch
1750arguments from a @code{va_list} pointer after passing it to
1751@code{vprintf}, and @code{va_end} is a no-op. (Note, however, that
1752subsequent @code{va_arg} calls will fetch the same arguments which
1753@code{vprintf} previously used.)
1754
1755Prototypes for these functions are declared in @file{stdio.h}.
1756@pindex stdio.h
1757
1758@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 1759@comment ISO
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1760@deftypefun int vprintf (const char *@var{template}, va_list @var{ap})
1761This function is similar to @code{printf} except that, instead of taking
1762a variable number of arguments directly, it takes an argument list
1763pointer @var{ap}.
1764@end deftypefun
1765
1766@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 1767@comment ISO
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1768@deftypefun int vfprintf (FILE *@var{stream}, const char *@var{template}, va_list @var{ap})
1769This is the equivalent of @code{fprintf} with the variable argument list
1770specified directly as for @code{vprintf}.
1771@end deftypefun
1772
1773@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 1774@comment ISO
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1775@deftypefun int vsprintf (char *@var{s}, const char *@var{template}, va_list @var{ap})
1776This is the equivalent of @code{sprintf} with the variable argument list
1777specified directly as for @code{vprintf}.
1778@end deftypefun
1779
1780@comment stdio.h
1781@comment GNU
1782@deftypefun int vsnprintf (char *@var{s}, size_t @var{size}, const char *@var{template}, va_list @var{ap})
1783This is the equivalent of @code{snprintf} with the variable argument list
1784specified directly as for @code{vprintf}.
1785@end deftypefun
1786
1787@comment stdio.h
1788@comment GNU
1789@deftypefun int vasprintf (char **@var{ptr}, const char *@var{template}, va_list @var{ap})
1790The @code{vasprintf} function is the equivalent of @code{asprintf} with the
1791variable argument list specified directly as for @code{vprintf}.
1792@end deftypefun
1793
1794@comment stdio.h
1795@comment GNU
1796@deftypefun int obstack_vprintf (struct obstack *@var{obstack}, const char *@var{template}, va_list @var{ap})
1797The @code{obstack_vprintf} function is the equivalent of
1798@code{obstack_printf} with the variable argument list specified directly
1799as for @code{vprintf}.@refill
1800@end deftypefun
1801
1802Here's an example showing how you might use @code{vfprintf}. This is a
1803function that prints error messages to the stream @code{stderr}, along
1804with a prefix indicating the name of the program
19c3f208 1805(@pxref{Error Messages}, for a description of
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1806@code{program_invocation_short_name}).
1807
1808@smallexample
1809@group
1810#include <stdio.h>
1811#include <stdarg.h>
1812
1813void
1814eprintf (const char *template, ...)
1815@{
1816 va_list ap;
1817 extern char *program_invocation_short_name;
1818
1819 fprintf (stderr, "%s: ", program_invocation_short_name);
4b8f94d3 1820 va_start (ap, template);
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1821 vfprintf (stderr, template, ap);
1822 va_end (ap);
1823@}
1824@end group
1825@end smallexample
1826
1827@noindent
1828You could call @code{eprintf} like this:
1829
1830@smallexample
1831eprintf ("file `%s' does not exist\n", filename);
1832@end smallexample
1833
1834In GNU C, there is a special construct you can use to let the compiler
1835know that a function uses a @code{printf}-style format string. Then it
1836can check the number and types of arguments in each call to the
1837function, and warn you when they do not match the format string.
1838For example, take this declaration of @code{eprintf}:
1839
1840@smallexample
1841void eprintf (const char *template, ...)
1842 __attribute__ ((format (printf, 1, 2)));
1843@end smallexample
1844
1845@noindent
1846This tells the compiler that @code{eprintf} uses a format string like
1847@code{printf} (as opposed to @code{scanf}; @pxref{Formatted Input});
1848the format string appears as the first argument;
1849and the arguments to satisfy the format begin with the second.
1850@xref{Function Attributes, , Declaring Attributes of Functions,
1851gcc.info, Using GNU CC}, for more information.
1852
1853@node Parsing a Template String
1854@subsection Parsing a Template String
1855@cindex parsing a template string
1856
1857You can use the function @code{parse_printf_format} to obtain
1858information about the number and types of arguments that are expected by
1859a given template string. This function permits interpreters that
1860provide interfaces to @code{printf} to avoid passing along invalid
1861arguments from the user's program, which could cause a crash.
1862
1863All the symbols described in this section are declared in the header
1864file @file{printf.h}.
1865
1866@comment printf.h
1867@comment GNU
1868@deftypefun size_t parse_printf_format (const char *@var{template}, size_t @var{n}, int *@var{argtypes})
1869This function returns information about the number and types of
1870arguments expected by the @code{printf} template string @var{template}.
1871The information is stored in the array @var{argtypes}; each element of
1872this array describes one argument. This information is encoded using
1873the various @samp{PA_} macros, listed below.
1874
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1875The argument @var{n} specifies the number of elements in the array
1876@var{argtypes}. This is the maximum number of elements that
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1877@code{parse_printf_format} will try to write.
1878
1879@code{parse_printf_format} returns the total number of arguments required
1880by @var{template}. If this number is greater than @var{n}, then the
1881information returned describes only the first @var{n} arguments. If you
04b9968b 1882want information about additional arguments, allocate a bigger
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1883array and call @code{parse_printf_format} again.
1884@end deftypefun
1885
1886The argument types are encoded as a combination of a basic type and
1887modifier flag bits.
1888
1889@comment printf.h
1890@comment GNU
1891@deftypevr Macro int PA_FLAG_MASK
1892This macro is a bitmask for the type modifier flag bits. You can write
1893the expression @code{(argtypes[i] & PA_FLAG_MASK)} to extract just the
1894flag bits for an argument, or @code{(argtypes[i] & ~PA_FLAG_MASK)} to
1895extract just the basic type code.
1896@end deftypevr
1897
1898Here are symbolic constants that represent the basic types; they stand
1899for integer values.
1900
779ae82e 1901@vtable @code
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1902@comment printf.h
1903@comment GNU
1904@item PA_INT
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1905This specifies that the base type is @code{int}.
1906
1907@comment printf.h
1908@comment GNU
1909@item PA_CHAR
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1910This specifies that the base type is @code{int}, cast to @code{char}.
1911
1912@comment printf.h
1913@comment GNU
1914@item PA_STRING
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1915This specifies that the base type is @code{char *}, a null-terminated string.
1916
1917@comment printf.h
1918@comment GNU
1919@item PA_POINTER
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1920This specifies that the base type is @code{void *}, an arbitrary pointer.
1921
1922@comment printf.h
1923@comment GNU
1924@item PA_FLOAT
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1925This specifies that the base type is @code{float}.
1926
1927@comment printf.h
1928@comment GNU
1929@item PA_DOUBLE
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1930This specifies that the base type is @code{double}.
1931
1932@comment printf.h
1933@comment GNU
1934@item PA_LAST
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1935You can define additional base types for your own programs as offsets
1936from @code{PA_LAST}. For example, if you have data types @samp{foo}
1937and @samp{bar} with their own specialized @code{printf} conversions,
1938you could define encodings for these types as:
1939
1940@smallexample
1941#define PA_FOO PA_LAST
1942#define PA_BAR (PA_LAST + 1)
1943@end smallexample
779ae82e 1944@end vtable
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1945
1946Here are the flag bits that modify a basic type. They are combined with
1947the code for the basic type using inclusive-or.
1948
779ae82e 1949@vtable @code
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1950@comment printf.h
1951@comment GNU
1952@item PA_FLAG_PTR
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1953If this bit is set, it indicates that the encoded type is a pointer to
1954the base type, rather than an immediate value.
1955For example, @samp{PA_INT|PA_FLAG_PTR} represents the type @samp{int *}.
1956
1957@comment printf.h
1958@comment GNU
1959@item PA_FLAG_SHORT
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1960If this bit is set, it indicates that the base type is modified with
1961@code{short}. (This corresponds to the @samp{h} type modifier.)
1962
1963@comment printf.h
1964@comment GNU
1965@item PA_FLAG_LONG
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1966If this bit is set, it indicates that the base type is modified with
1967@code{long}. (This corresponds to the @samp{l} type modifier.)
1968
1969@comment printf.h
1970@comment GNU
1971@item PA_FLAG_LONG_LONG
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1972If this bit is set, it indicates that the base type is modified with
1973@code{long long}. (This corresponds to the @samp{L} type modifier.)
1974
1975@comment printf.h
1976@comment GNU
1977@item PA_FLAG_LONG_DOUBLE
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1978This is a synonym for @code{PA_FLAG_LONG_LONG}, used by convention with
1979a base type of @code{PA_DOUBLE} to indicate a type of @code{long double}.
779ae82e 1980@end vtable
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1981
1982@ifinfo
6d52618b 1983For an example of using these facilities, see @ref{Example of Parsing}.
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1984@end ifinfo
1985
1986@node Example of Parsing
1987@subsection Example of Parsing a Template String
1988
1989Here is an example of decoding argument types for a format string. We
1990assume this is part of an interpreter which contains arguments of type
1991@code{NUMBER}, @code{CHAR}, @code{STRING} and @code{STRUCTURE} (and
1992perhaps others which are not valid here).
1993
1994@smallexample
1995/* @r{Test whether the @var{nargs} specified objects}
1996 @r{in the vector @var{args} are valid}
1997 @r{for the format string @var{format}:}
1998 @r{if so, return 1.}
1999 @r{If not, return 0 after printing an error message.} */
2000
2001int
2002validate_args (char *format, int nargs, OBJECT *args)
2003@{
2004 int *argtypes;
2005 int nwanted;
2006
2007 /* @r{Get the information about the arguments.}
2008 @r{Each conversion specification must be at least two characters}
2009 @r{long, so there cannot be more specifications than half the}
2010 @r{length of the string.} */
2011
2012 argtypes = (int *) alloca (strlen (format) / 2 * sizeof (int));
2013 nwanted = parse_printf_format (string, nelts, argtypes);
2014
2015 /* @r{Check the number of arguments.} */
2016 if (nwanted > nargs)
2017 @{
2018 error ("too few arguments (at least %d required)", nwanted);
2019 return 0;
2020 @}
19c3f208 2021
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2022 /* @r{Check the C type wanted for each argument}
2023 @r{and see if the object given is suitable.} */
2024 for (i = 0; i < nwanted; i++)
2025 @{
2026 int wanted;
2027
2028 if (argtypes[i] & PA_FLAG_PTR)
2029 wanted = STRUCTURE;
2030 else
2031 switch (argtypes[i] & ~PA_FLAG_MASK)
2032 @{
2033 case PA_INT:
2034 case PA_FLOAT:
2035 case PA_DOUBLE:
2036 wanted = NUMBER;
2037 break;
2038 case PA_CHAR:
2039 wanted = CHAR;
2040 break;
2041 case PA_STRING:
2042 wanted = STRING;
2043 break;
2044 case PA_POINTER:
2045 wanted = STRUCTURE;
2046 break;
2047 @}
2048 if (TYPE (args[i]) != wanted)
2049 @{
2050 error ("type mismatch for arg number %d", i);
2051 return 0;
2052 @}
2053 @}
2054 return 1;
2055@}
2056@end smallexample
2057
2058@node Customizing Printf
2059@section Customizing @code{printf}
2060@cindex customizing @code{printf}
2061@cindex defining new @code{printf} conversions
2062@cindex extending @code{printf}
2063
2064The GNU C library lets you define your own custom conversion specifiers
2065for @code{printf} template strings, to teach @code{printf} clever ways
2066to print the important data structures of your program.
2067
2068The way you do this is by registering the conversion with the function
2069@code{register_printf_function}; see @ref{Registering New Conversions}.
2070One of the arguments you pass to this function is a pointer to a handler
2071function that produces the actual output; see @ref{Defining the Output
2072Handler}, for information on how to write this function.
2073
2074You can also install a function that just returns information about the
2075number and type of arguments expected by the conversion specifier.
2076@xref{Parsing a Template String}, for information about this.
2077
2078The facilities of this section are declared in the header file
2079@file{printf.h}.
2080
2081@menu
19c3f208 2082* Registering New Conversions:: Using @code{register_printf_function}
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2083 to register a new output conversion.
2084* Conversion Specifier Options:: The handler must be able to get
2085 the options specified in the
19c3f208 2086 template when it is called.
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2087* Defining the Output Handler:: Defining the handler and arginfo
2088 functions that are passed as arguments
19c3f208 2089 to @code{register_printf_function}.
28f540f4 2090* Printf Extension Example:: How to define a @code{printf}
19c3f208 2091 handler function.
29bb8719 2092* Predefined Printf Handlers:: Predefined @code{printf} handlers.
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2093@end menu
2094
2095@strong{Portability Note:} The ability to extend the syntax of
f65fd747 2096@code{printf} template strings is a GNU extension. ISO standard C has
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2097nothing similar.
2098
2099@node Registering New Conversions
2100@subsection Registering New Conversions
2101
2102The function to register a new output conversion is
2103@code{register_printf_function}, declared in @file{printf.h}.
2104@pindex printf.h
2105
2106@comment printf.h
2107@comment GNU
2108@deftypefun int register_printf_function (int @var{spec}, printf_function @var{handler-function}, printf_arginfo_function @var{arginfo-function})
2109This function defines the conversion specifier character @var{spec}.
42be70d4 2110Thus, if @var{spec} is @code{'Y'}, it defines the conversion @samp{%Y}.
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2111You can redefine the built-in conversions like @samp{%s}, but flag
2112characters like @samp{#} and type modifiers like @samp{l} can never be
2113used as conversions; calling @code{register_printf_function} for those
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2114characters has no effect. It is advisable not to use lowercase letters,
2115since the ISO C standard warns that additional lowercase letters may be
2116standardized in future editions of the standard.
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2117
2118The @var{handler-function} is the function called by @code{printf} and
2119friends when this conversion appears in a template string.
2120@xref{Defining the Output Handler}, for information about how to define
2121a function to pass as this argument. If you specify a null pointer, any
2122existing handler function for @var{spec} is removed.
2123
2124The @var{arginfo-function} is the function called by
2125@code{parse_printf_format} when this conversion appears in a
2126template string. @xref{Parsing a Template String}, for information
2127about this.
2128
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2129@c The following is not true anymore. The `parse_printf_format' function
2130@c is now also called from `vfprintf' via `parse_one_spec'.
2131@c --drepper@gnu, 1996/11/14
2132@c
2133@c Normally, you install both functions for a conversion at the same time,
2134@c but if you are never going to call @code{parse_printf_format}, you do
2135@c not need to define an arginfo function.
2136
04b9968b 2137@strong{Attention:} In the GNU C library versions before 2.0 the
54d79e99 2138@var{arginfo-function} function did not need to be installed unless
04b9968b 2139the user used the @code{parse_printf_format} function. This has changed.
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2140Now a call to any of the @code{printf} functions will call this
2141function when this format specifier appears in the format string.
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2142
2143The return value is @code{0} on success, and @code{-1} on failure
2144(which occurs if @var{spec} is out of range).
2145
2146You can redefine the standard output conversions, but this is probably
2147not a good idea because of the potential for confusion. Library routines
2148written by other people could break if you do this.
2149@end deftypefun
2150
2151@node Conversion Specifier Options
2152@subsection Conversion Specifier Options
2153
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2154If you define a meaning for @samp{%A}, what if the template contains
2155@samp{%+23A} or @samp{%-#A}? To implement a sensible meaning for these,
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2156the handler when called needs to be able to get the options specified in
2157the template.
2158
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2159Both the @var{handler-function} and @var{arginfo-function} accept an
2160argument that points to a @code{struct printf_info}, which contains
2161information about the options appearing in an instance of the conversion
2162specifier. This data type is declared in the header file
2163@file{printf.h}.
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2164@pindex printf.h
2165
2166@comment printf.h
2167@comment GNU
2168@deftp {Type} {struct printf_info}
2169This structure is used to pass information about the options appearing
2170in an instance of a conversion specifier in a @code{printf} template
2171string to the handler and arginfo functions for that specifier. It
2172contains the following members:
2173
2174@table @code
2175@item int prec
2176This is the precision specified. The value is @code{-1} if no precision
2177was specified. If the precision was given as @samp{*}, the
2178@code{printf_info} structure passed to the handler function contains the
2179actual value retrieved from the argument list. But the structure passed
2180to the arginfo function contains a value of @code{INT_MIN}, since the
2181actual value is not known.
2182
2183@item int width
2184This is the minimum field width specified. The value is @code{0} if no
2185width was specified. If the field width was given as @samp{*}, the
2186@code{printf_info} structure passed to the handler function contains the
2187actual value retrieved from the argument list. But the structure passed
2188to the arginfo function contains a value of @code{INT_MIN}, since the
2189actual value is not known.
2190
54d79e99 2191@item wchar_t spec
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2192This is the conversion specifier character specified. It's stored in
2193the structure so that you can register the same handler function for
2194multiple characters, but still have a way to tell them apart when the
2195handler function is called.
2196
2197@item unsigned int is_long_double
2198This is a boolean that is true if the @samp{L}, @samp{ll}, or @samp{q}
2199type modifier was specified. For integer conversions, this indicates
2200@code{long long int}, as opposed to @code{long double} for floating
2201point conversions.
2202
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2203@item unsigned int is_char
2204This is a boolean that is true if the @samp{hh} type modifier was specified.
2205
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2206@item unsigned int is_short
2207This is a boolean that is true if the @samp{h} type modifier was specified.
2208
2209@item unsigned int is_long
2210This is a boolean that is true if the @samp{l} type modifier was specified.
2211
2212@item unsigned int alt
2213This is a boolean that is true if the @samp{#} flag was specified.
2214
2215@item unsigned int space
2216This is a boolean that is true if the @samp{ } flag was specified.
2217
2218@item unsigned int left
2219This is a boolean that is true if the @samp{-} flag was specified.
2220
2221@item unsigned int showsign
2222This is a boolean that is true if the @samp{+} flag was specified.
2223
2224@item unsigned int group
2225This is a boolean that is true if the @samp{'} flag was specified.
2226
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2227@item unsigned int extra
2228This flag has a special meaning depending on the context. It could
2229be used freely by the user-defined handlers but when called from
2230the @code{printf} function this variable always contains the value
2231@code{0}.
2232
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2233@item unsigned int wide
2234This flag is set if the stream is wide oriented.
2235
54d79e99 2236@item wchar_t pad
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2237This is the character to use for padding the output to the minimum field
2238width. The value is @code{'0'} if the @samp{0} flag was specified, and
2239@code{' '} otherwise.
2240@end table
2241@end deftp
2242
2243
2244@node Defining the Output Handler
2245@subsection Defining the Output Handler
2246
2247Now let's look at how to define the handler and arginfo functions
2248which are passed as arguments to @code{register_printf_function}.
2249
04b9968b 2250@strong{Compatibility Note:} The interface changed in GNU libc
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2251version 2.0. Previously the third argument was of type
2252@code{va_list *}.
2253
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2254You should define your handler functions with a prototype like:
2255
2256@smallexample
2257int @var{function} (FILE *stream, const struct printf_info *info,
54d79e99 2258 const void *const *args)
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2259@end smallexample
2260
54d79e99 2261The @var{stream} argument passed to the handler function is the stream to
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2262which it should write output.
2263
54d79e99 2264The @var{info} argument is a pointer to a structure that contains
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2265information about the various options that were included with the
2266conversion in the template string. You should not modify this structure
2267inside your handler function. @xref{Conversion Specifier Options}, for
2268a description of this data structure.
2269
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2270@c The following changes some time back. --drepper@gnu, 1996/11/14
2271@c
2272@c The @code{ap_pointer} argument is used to pass the tail of the variable
2273@c argument list containing the values to be printed to your handler.
2274@c Unlike most other functions that can be passed an explicit variable
2275@c argument list, this is a @emph{pointer} to a @code{va_list}, rather than
2276@c the @code{va_list} itself. Thus, you should fetch arguments by
2277@c means of @code{va_arg (*ap_pointer, @var{type})}.
2278@c
2279@c (Passing a pointer here allows the function that calls your handler
2280@c function to update its own @code{va_list} variable to account for the
2281@c arguments that your handler processes. @xref{Variadic Functions}.)
2282
2283The @var{args} is a vector of pointers to the arguments data.
04b9968b 2284The number of arguments was determined by calling the argument
54d79e99 2285information function provided by the user.
28f540f4
RM
2286
2287Your handler function should return a value just like @code{printf}
2288does: it should return the number of characters it has written, or a
2289negative value to indicate an error.
2290
2291@comment printf.h
2292@comment GNU
2293@deftp {Data Type} printf_function
2294This is the data type that a handler function should have.
2295@end deftp
2296
2297If you are going to use @w{@code{parse_printf_format}} in your
54d79e99 2298application, you must also define a function to pass as the
28f540f4 2299@var{arginfo-function} argument for each new conversion you install with
19c3f208 2300@code{register_printf_function}.
28f540f4 2301
54d79e99 2302You have to define these functions with a prototype like:
28f540f4
RM
2303
2304@smallexample
2305int @var{function} (const struct printf_info *info,
2306 size_t n, int *argtypes)
2307@end smallexample
2308
2309The return value from the function should be the number of arguments the
2310conversion expects. The function should also fill in no more than
2311@var{n} elements of the @var{argtypes} array with information about the
2312types of each of these arguments. This information is encoded using the
2313various @samp{PA_} macros. (You will notice that this is the same
2314calling convention @code{parse_printf_format} itself uses.)
2315
2316@comment printf.h
2317@comment GNU
2318@deftp {Data Type} printf_arginfo_function
2319This type is used to describe functions that return information about
2320the number and type of arguments used by a conversion specifier.
2321@end deftp
2322
2323@node Printf Extension Example
2324@subsection @code{printf} Extension Example
2325
2326Here is an example showing how to define a @code{printf} handler function.
19c3f208 2327This program defines a data structure called a @code{Widget} and
28f540f4
RM
2328defines the @samp{%W} conversion to print information about @w{@code{Widget *}}
2329arguments, including the pointer value and the name stored in the data
2330structure. The @samp{%W} conversion supports the minimum field width and
2331left-justification options, but ignores everything else.
2332
2333@smallexample
2334@include rprintf.c.texi
2335@end smallexample
2336
2337The output produced by this program looks like:
2338
2339@smallexample
2340|<Widget 0xffeffb7c: mywidget>|
2341| <Widget 0xffeffb7c: mywidget>|
2342|<Widget 0xffeffb7c: mywidget> |
2343@end smallexample
2344
29bb8719
UD
2345@node Predefined Printf Handlers
2346@subsection Predefined @code{printf} Handlers
2347
2348The GNU libc also contains a concrete and useful application of the
2349@code{printf} handler extension. There are two functions available
2350which implement a special way to print floating-point numbers.
2351
2352@comment printf.h
2353@comment GNU
2354@deftypefun int printf_size (FILE *@var{fp}, const struct printf_info *@var{info}, const void *const *@var{args})
2355Print a given floating point number as for the format @code{%f} except
2356that there is a postfix character indicating the divisor for the
2357number to make this less than 1000. There are two possible divisors:
04b9968b 2358powers of 1024 or powers of 1000. Which one is used depends on the
29bb8719
UD
2359format character specified while registered this handler. If the
2360character is of lower case, 1024 is used. For upper case characters,
23611000 is used.
2362
2363The postfix tag corresponds to bytes, kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes,
2364etc. The full table is:
2365
779ae82e
UD
2366@ifinfo
2367@multitable @hsep @vsep {' '} {2^10 (1024)} {zetta} {Upper} {10^24 (1000)}
29bb8719
UD
2368@item low @tab Multiplier @tab From @tab Upper @tab Multiplier
2369@item ' ' @tab 1 @tab @tab ' ' @tab 1
2370@item k @tab 2^10 (1024) @tab kilo @tab K @tab 10^3 (1000)
2371@item m @tab 2^20 @tab mega @tab M @tab 10^6
2372@item g @tab 2^30 @tab giga @tab G @tab 10^9
2373@item t @tab 2^40 @tab tera @tab T @tab 10^12
2374@item p @tab 2^50 @tab peta @tab P @tab 10^15
2375@item e @tab 2^60 @tab exa @tab E @tab 10^18
2376@item z @tab 2^70 @tab zetta @tab Z @tab 10^21
2377@item y @tab 2^80 @tab yotta @tab Y @tab 10^24
2378@end multitable
779ae82e
UD
2379@end ifinfo
2380@iftex
2381@tex
2382\hbox to\hsize{\hfil\vbox{\offinterlineskip
2383\hrule
2384\halign{\strut#& \vrule#\tabskip=1em plus2em& {\tt#}\hfil& \vrule#& #\hfil& \vrule#& #\hfil& \vrule#& {\tt#}\hfil& \vrule#& #\hfil& \vrule#\tabskip=0pt\cr
2385\noalign{\hrule}
2386\omit&height2pt&\omit&&\omit&&\omit&&\omit&&\omit&\cr
2387&& \omit low && Multiplier && From && \omit Upper && Multiplier &\cr
2388\omit&height2pt&\omit&&\omit&&\omit&&\omit&&\omit&\cr
2389\noalign{\hrule}
2390&& {\tt\char32} && 1 && && {\tt\char32} && 1 &\cr
2391&& k && $2^{10} = 1024$ && kilo && K && $10^3 = 1000$ &\cr
2392&& m && $2^{20}$ && mega && M && $10^6$ &\cr
2393&& g && $2^{30}$ && giga && G && $10^9$ &\cr
2394&& t && $2^{40}$ && tera && T && $10^{12}$ &\cr
2395&& p && $2^{50}$ && peta && P && $10^{15}$ &\cr
2396&& e && $2^{60}$ && exa && E && $10^{18}$ &\cr
2397&& z && $2^{70}$ && zetta && Z && $10^{21}$ &\cr
2398&& y && $2^{80}$ && yotta && Y && $10^{24}$ &\cr
2399\noalign{\hrule}}}\hfil}
2400@end tex
2401@end iftex
29bb8719
UD
2402
2403The default precision is 3, i.e., 1024 is printed with a lower-case
2404format character as if it were @code{%.3fk} and will yield @code{1.000k}.
2405@end deftypefun
2406
2407Due to the requirements of @code{register_printf_function} we must also
04b9968b 2408provide the function which returns information about the arguments.
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UD
2409
2410@comment printf.h
2411@comment GNU
2412@deftypefun int printf_size_info (const struct printf_info *@var{info}, size_t @var{n}, int *@var{argtypes})
2413This function will return in @var{argtypes} the information about the
2414used parameters in the way the @code{vfprintf} implementation expects
2415it. The format always takes one argument.
2416@end deftypefun
2417
2418To use these functions both functions must be registered with a call like
2419
2420@smallexample
2421register_printf_function ('B', printf_size, printf_size_info);
2422@end smallexample
2423
2424Here we register the functions to print numbers as powers of 1000 since
f2ea0f5b 2425the format character @code{'B'} is an upper-case character. If we
29bb8719
UD
2426would additionally use @code{'b'} in a line like
2427
2428@smallexample
2429register_printf_function ('b', printf_size, printf_size_info);
2430@end smallexample
2431
2432@noindent
04b9968b
UD
2433we could also print using a power of 1024. Please note that all that is
2434different in these two lines is the format specifier. The
2435@code{printf_size} function knows about the difference between lower and upper
29bb8719
UD
2436case format specifiers.
2437
2438The use of @code{'B'} and @code{'b'} is no coincidence. Rather it is
2439the preferred way to use this functionality since it is available on
04b9968b 2440some other systems which also use format specifiers.
29bb8719 2441
28f540f4
RM
2442@node Formatted Input
2443@section Formatted Input
2444
2445@cindex formatted input from a stream
2446@cindex reading from a stream, formatted
2447@cindex format string, for @code{scanf}
2448@cindex template, for @code{scanf}
2449The functions described in this section (@code{scanf} and related
2450functions) provide facilities for formatted input analogous to the
2451formatted output facilities. These functions provide a mechanism for
2452reading arbitrary values under the control of a @dfn{format string} or
2453@dfn{template string}.
2454
2455@menu
2456* Formatted Input Basics:: Some basics to get you started.
2457* Input Conversion Syntax:: Syntax of conversion specifications.
2458* Table of Input Conversions:: Summary of input conversions and what they do.
2459* Numeric Input Conversions:: Details of conversions for reading numbers.
2460* String Input Conversions:: Details of conversions for reading strings.
2461* Dynamic String Input:: String conversions that @code{malloc} the buffer.
2462* Other Input Conversions:: Details of miscellaneous other conversions.
2463* Formatted Input Functions:: Descriptions of the actual functions.
2464* Variable Arguments Input:: @code{vscanf} and friends.
2465@end menu
2466
2467@node Formatted Input Basics
2468@subsection Formatted Input Basics
2469
2470Calls to @code{scanf} are superficially similar to calls to
2471@code{printf} in that arbitrary arguments are read under the control of
2472a template string. While the syntax of the conversion specifications in
2473the template is very similar to that for @code{printf}, the
2474interpretation of the template is oriented more towards free-format
2475input and simple pattern matching, rather than fixed-field formatting.
2476For example, most @code{scanf} conversions skip over any amount of
2477``white space'' (including spaces, tabs, and newlines) in the input
2478file, and there is no concept of precision for the numeric input
2479conversions as there is for the corresponding output conversions.
2480Ordinarily, non-whitespace characters in the template are expected to
2481match characters in the input stream exactly, but a matching failure is
2482distinct from an input error on the stream.
2483@cindex conversion specifications (@code{scanf})
2484
2485Another area of difference between @code{scanf} and @code{printf} is
2486that you must remember to supply pointers rather than immediate values
2487as the optional arguments to @code{scanf}; the values that are read are
2488stored in the objects that the pointers point to. Even experienced
2489programmers tend to forget this occasionally, so if your program is
2490getting strange errors that seem to be related to @code{scanf}, you
2491might want to double-check this.
2492
2493When a @dfn{matching failure} occurs, @code{scanf} returns immediately,
2494leaving the first non-matching character as the next character to be
2495read from the stream. The normal return value from @code{scanf} is the
2496number of values that were assigned, so you can use this to determine if
2497a matching error happened before all the expected values were read.
2498@cindex matching failure, in @code{scanf}
2499
2500The @code{scanf} function is typically used for things like reading in
2501the contents of tables. For example, here is a function that uses
2502@code{scanf} to initialize an array of @code{double}:
2503
2504@smallexample
2505void
2506readarray (double *array, int n)
2507@{
2508 int i;
2509 for (i=0; i<n; i++)
2510 if (scanf (" %lf", &(array[i])) != 1)
2511 invalid_input_error ();
2512@}
2513@end smallexample
2514
2515The formatted input functions are not used as frequently as the
2516formatted output functions. Partly, this is because it takes some care
2517to use them properly. Another reason is that it is difficult to recover
2518from a matching error.
2519
2520If you are trying to read input that doesn't match a single, fixed
2521pattern, you may be better off using a tool such as Flex to generate a
2522lexical scanner, or Bison to generate a parser, rather than using
2523@code{scanf}. For more information about these tools, see @ref{, , ,
2524flex.info, Flex: The Lexical Scanner Generator}, and @ref{, , ,
2525bison.info, The Bison Reference Manual}.
2526
2527@node Input Conversion Syntax
2528@subsection Input Conversion Syntax
2529
2530A @code{scanf} template string is a string that contains ordinary
2531multibyte characters interspersed with conversion specifications that
2532start with @samp{%}.
2533
2534Any whitespace character (as defined by the @code{isspace} function;
2535@pxref{Classification of Characters}) in the template causes any number
2536of whitespace characters in the input stream to be read and discarded.
2537The whitespace characters that are matched need not be exactly the same
2538whitespace characters that appear in the template string. For example,
2539write @samp{ , } in the template to recognize a comma with optional
2540whitespace before and after.
2541
2542Other characters in the template string that are not part of conversion
2543specifications must match characters in the input stream exactly; if
2544this is not the case, a matching failure occurs.
2545
2546The conversion specifications in a @code{scanf} template string
2547have the general form:
2548
2549@smallexample
2550% @var{flags} @var{width} @var{type} @var{conversion}
2551@end smallexample
2552
2553In more detail, an input conversion specification consists of an initial
2554@samp{%} character followed in sequence by:
2555
2556@itemize @bullet
2557@item
2558An optional @dfn{flag character} @samp{*}, which says to ignore the text
2559read for this specification. When @code{scanf} finds a conversion
2560specification that uses this flag, it reads input as directed by the
2561rest of the conversion specification, but it discards this input, does
2562not use a pointer argument, and does not increment the count of
2563successful assignments.
2564@cindex flag character (@code{scanf})
2565
2566@item
2567An optional flag character @samp{a} (valid with string conversions only)
2568which requests allocation of a buffer long enough to store the string in.
2569(This is a GNU extension.)
2570@xref{Dynamic String Input}.
2571
2572@item
2573An optional decimal integer that specifies the @dfn{maximum field
2574width}. Reading of characters from the input stream stops either when
2575this maximum is reached or when a non-matching character is found,
2576whichever happens first. Most conversions discard initial whitespace
2577characters (those that don't are explicitly documented), and these
2578discarded characters don't count towards the maximum field width.
2579String input conversions store a null character to mark the end of the
2580input; the maximum field width does not include this terminator.
2581@cindex maximum field width (@code{scanf})
2582
2583@item
2584An optional @dfn{type modifier character}. For example, you can
2585specify a type modifier of @samp{l} with integer conversions such as
2586@samp{%d} to specify that the argument is a pointer to a @code{long int}
2587rather than a pointer to an @code{int}.
2588@cindex type modifier character (@code{scanf})
2589
2590@item
2591A character that specifies the conversion to be applied.
2592@end itemize
2593
19c3f208 2594The exact options that are permitted and how they are interpreted vary
28f540f4
RM
2595between the different conversion specifiers. See the descriptions of the
2596individual conversions for information about the particular options that
2597they allow.
2598
2599With the @samp{-Wformat} option, the GNU C compiler checks calls to
2600@code{scanf} and related functions. It examines the format string and
2601verifies that the correct number and types of arguments are supplied.
2602There is also a GNU C syntax to tell the compiler that a function you
19c3f208 2603write uses a @code{scanf}-style format string.
28f540f4
RM
2604@xref{Function Attributes, , Declaring Attributes of Functions,
2605gcc.info, Using GNU CC}, for more information.
2606
2607@node Table of Input Conversions
2608@subsection Table of Input Conversions
2609@cindex input conversions, for @code{scanf}
2610
2611Here is a table that summarizes the various conversion specifications:
2612
2613@table @asis
2614@item @samp{%d}
2615Matches an optionally signed integer written in decimal. @xref{Numeric
2616Input Conversions}.
2617
2618@item @samp{%i}
2619Matches an optionally signed integer in any of the formats that the C
2620language defines for specifying an integer constant. @xref{Numeric
2621Input Conversions}.
2622
2623@item @samp{%o}
2624Matches an unsigned integer written in octal radix.
2625@xref{Numeric Input Conversions}.
2626
2627@item @samp{%u}
2628Matches an unsigned integer written in decimal radix.
2629@xref{Numeric Input Conversions}.
2630
2631@item @samp{%x}, @samp{%X}
2632Matches an unsigned integer written in hexadecimal radix.
2633@xref{Numeric Input Conversions}.
2634
2635@item @samp{%e}, @samp{%f}, @samp{%g}, @samp{%E}, @samp{%G}
2636Matches an optionally signed floating-point number. @xref{Numeric Input
2637Conversions}.
2638
2639@item @samp{%s}
2640Matches a string containing only non-whitespace characters.
2641@xref{String Input Conversions}.
2642
2643@item @samp{%[}
2644Matches a string of characters that belong to a specified set.
2645@xref{String Input Conversions}.
2646
2647@item @samp{%c}
2648Matches a string of one or more characters; the number of characters
2649read is controlled by the maximum field width given for the conversion.
2650@xref{String Input Conversions}.
2651
2652@item @samp{%p}
2653Matches a pointer value in the same implementation-defined format used
2654by the @samp{%p} output conversion for @code{printf}. @xref{Other Input
2655Conversions}.
2656
2657@item @samp{%n}
2658This conversion doesn't read any characters; it records the number of
2659characters read so far by this call. @xref{Other Input Conversions}.
2660
2661@item @samp{%%}
2662This matches a literal @samp{%} character in the input stream. No
2663corresponding argument is used. @xref{Other Input Conversions}.
2664@end table
2665
2666If the syntax of a conversion specification is invalid, the behavior is
2667undefined. If there aren't enough function arguments provided to supply
2668addresses for all the conversion specifications in the template strings
2669that perform assignments, or if the arguments are not of the correct
2670types, the behavior is also undefined. On the other hand, extra
2671arguments are simply ignored.
2672
2673@node Numeric Input Conversions
2674@subsection Numeric Input Conversions
2675
2676This section describes the @code{scanf} conversions for reading numeric
2677values.
2678
2679The @samp{%d} conversion matches an optionally signed integer in decimal
2680radix. The syntax that is recognized is the same as that for the
2681@code{strtol} function (@pxref{Parsing of Integers}) with the value
2682@code{10} for the @var{base} argument.
2683
2684The @samp{%i} conversion matches an optionally signed integer in any of
2685the formats that the C language defines for specifying an integer
2686constant. The syntax that is recognized is the same as that for the
2687@code{strtol} function (@pxref{Parsing of Integers}) with the value
2688@code{0} for the @var{base} argument. (You can print integers in this
2689syntax with @code{printf} by using the @samp{#} flag character with the
2690@samp{%x}, @samp{%o}, or @samp{%d} conversion. @xref{Integer Conversions}.)
2691
2692For example, any of the strings @samp{10}, @samp{0xa}, or @samp{012}
2693could be read in as integers under the @samp{%i} conversion. Each of
2694these specifies a number with decimal value @code{10}.
2695
2696The @samp{%o}, @samp{%u}, and @samp{%x} conversions match unsigned
2697integers in octal, decimal, and hexadecimal radices, respectively. The
2698syntax that is recognized is the same as that for the @code{strtoul}
2699function (@pxref{Parsing of Integers}) with the appropriate value
2700(@code{8}, @code{10}, or @code{16}) for the @var{base} argument.
2701
2702The @samp{%X} conversion is identical to the @samp{%x} conversion. They
2703both permit either uppercase or lowercase letters to be used as digits.
2704
2705The default type of the corresponding argument for the @code{%d} and
2706@code{%i} conversions is @code{int *}, and @code{unsigned int *} for the
2707other integer conversions. You can use the following type modifiers to
2708specify other sizes of integer:
2709
2710@table @samp
cc3fa755
UD
2711@item hh
2712Specifies that the argument is a @code{signed char *} or @code{unsigned
2713char *}.
2714
ec751a23 2715This modifier was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
e852e889 2716
28f540f4
RM
2717@item h
2718Specifies that the argument is a @code{short int *} or @code{unsigned
2719short int *}.
2720
e852e889
UD
2721@item j
2722Specifies that the argument is a @code{intmax_t *} or @code{uintmax_t *}.
2723
ec751a23 2724This modifier was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
e852e889 2725
28f540f4
RM
2726@item l
2727Specifies that the argument is a @code{long int *} or @code{unsigned
2728long int *}. Two @samp{l} characters is like the @samp{L} modifier, below.
2729
2730@need 100
2731@item ll
2732@itemx L
2733@itemx q
2734Specifies that the argument is a @code{long long int *} or @code{unsigned long long int *}. (The @code{long long} type is an extension supported by the
2735GNU C compiler. For systems that don't provide extra-long integers, this
2736is the same as @code{long int}.)
2737
2738The @samp{q} modifier is another name for the same thing, which comes
2739from 4.4 BSD; a @w{@code{long long int}} is sometimes called a ``quad''
2740@code{int}.
e852e889
UD
2741
2742@item t
2743Specifies that the argument is a @code{ptrdiff_t *}.
2744
ec751a23 2745This modifier was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
e852e889
UD
2746
2747@item z
2748Specifies that the argument is a @code{size_t *}.
2749
ec751a23 2750This modifier was introduced in @w{ISO C99}.
28f540f4
RM
2751@end table
2752
2753All of the @samp{%e}, @samp{%f}, @samp{%g}, @samp{%E}, and @samp{%G}
2754input conversions are interchangeable. They all match an optionally
2755signed floating point number, in the same syntax as for the
2756@code{strtod} function (@pxref{Parsing of Floats}).
2757
2758For the floating-point input conversions, the default argument type is
2759@code{float *}. (This is different from the corresponding output
2760conversions, where the default type is @code{double}; remember that
2761@code{float} arguments to @code{printf} are converted to @code{double}
2762by the default argument promotions, but @code{float *} arguments are
2763not promoted to @code{double *}.) You can specify other sizes of float
2764using these type modifiers:
2765
2766@table @samp
2767@item l
2768Specifies that the argument is of type @code{double *}.
2769
2770@item L
2771Specifies that the argument is of type @code{long double *}.
2772@end table
2773
2c6fe0bd
UD
2774For all the above number parsing formats there is an additional optional
2775flag @samp{'}. When this flag is given the @code{scanf} function
2776expects the number represented in the input string to be formatted
2777according to the grouping rules of the currently selected locale
2778(@pxref{General Numeric}).
2779
2780If the @code{"C"} or @code{"POSIX"} locale is selected there is no
2781difference. But for a locale which specifies values for the appropriate
2782fields in the locale the input must have the correct form in the input.
2783Otherwise the longest prefix with a correct form is processed.
2784
28f540f4
RM
2785@node String Input Conversions
2786@subsection String Input Conversions
2787
2788This section describes the @code{scanf} input conversions for reading
19c3f208 2789string and character values: @samp{%s}, @samp{%[}, and @samp{%c}.
28f540f4
RM
2790
2791You have two options for how to receive the input from these
2792conversions:
2793
2794@itemize @bullet
2795@item
2796Provide a buffer to store it in. This is the default. You
2797should provide an argument of type @code{char *}.
2798
2799@strong{Warning:} To make a robust program, you must make sure that the
2800input (plus its terminating null) cannot possibly exceed the size of the
2801buffer you provide. In general, the only way to do this is to specify a
2802maximum field width one less than the buffer size. @strong{If you
2803provide the buffer, always specify a maximum field width to prevent
2804overflow.}
2805
2806@item
2807Ask @code{scanf} to allocate a big enough buffer, by specifying the
2808@samp{a} flag character. This is a GNU extension. You should provide
2809an argument of type @code{char **} for the buffer address to be stored
2810in. @xref{Dynamic String Input}.
2811@end itemize
2812
2813The @samp{%c} conversion is the simplest: it matches a fixed number of
04b9968b 2814characters, always. The maximum field width says how many characters to
28f540f4
RM
2815read; if you don't specify the maximum, the default is 1. This
2816conversion doesn't append a null character to the end of the text it
2817reads. It also does not skip over initial whitespace characters. It
2818reads precisely the next @var{n} characters, and fails if it cannot get
2819that many. Since there is always a maximum field width with @samp{%c}
2820(whether specified, or 1 by default), you can always prevent overflow by
2821making the buffer long enough.
2822
2823The @samp{%s} conversion matches a string of non-whitespace characters.
2824It skips and discards initial whitespace, but stops when it encounters
2825more whitespace after having read something. It stores a null character
2826at the end of the text that it reads.
2827
2828For example, reading the input:
2829
2830@smallexample
2831 hello, world
2832@end smallexample
2833
2834@noindent
2835with the conversion @samp{%10c} produces @code{" hello, wo"}, but
2836reading the same input with the conversion @samp{%10s} produces
2837@code{"hello,"}.
2838
2839@strong{Warning:} If you do not specify a field width for @samp{%s},
2840then the number of characters read is limited only by where the next
2841whitespace character appears. This almost certainly means that invalid
2842input can make your program crash---which is a bug.
2843
2844To read in characters that belong to an arbitrary set of your choice,
2845use the @samp{%[} conversion. You specify the set between the @samp{[}
2846character and a following @samp{]} character, using the same syntax used
2847in regular expressions. As special cases:
2848
2849@itemize @bullet
19c3f208 2850@item
28f540f4
RM
2851A literal @samp{]} character can be specified as the first character
2852of the set.
2853
19c3f208 2854@item
28f540f4
RM
2855An embedded @samp{-} character (that is, one that is not the first or
2856last character of the set) is used to specify a range of characters.
2857
19c3f208 2858@item
28f540f4
RM
2859If a caret character @samp{^} immediately follows the initial @samp{[},
2860then the set of allowed input characters is the everything @emph{except}
2861the characters listed.
2862@end itemize
2863
2864The @samp{%[} conversion does not skip over initial whitespace
2865characters.
2866
2867Here are some examples of @samp{%[} conversions and what they mean:
2868
2869@table @samp
2870@item %25[1234567890]
2871Matches a string of up to 25 digits.
2872
2873@item %25[][]
2874Matches a string of up to 25 square brackets.
2875
2876@item %25[^ \f\n\r\t\v]
2877Matches a string up to 25 characters long that doesn't contain any of
2878the standard whitespace characters. This is slightly different from
2879@samp{%s}, because if the input begins with a whitespace character,
2880@samp{%[} reports a matching failure while @samp{%s} simply discards the
2881initial whitespace.
2882
19c3f208 2883@item %25[a-z]
28f540f4
RM
2884Matches up to 25 lowercase characters.
2885@end table
2886
2887One more reminder: the @samp{%s} and @samp{%[} conversions are
2888@strong{dangerous} if you don't specify a maximum width or use the
2889@samp{a} flag, because input too long would overflow whatever buffer you
2890have provided for it. No matter how long your buffer is, a user could
2891supply input that is longer. A well-written program reports invalid
2892input with a comprehensible error message, not with a crash.
2893
2894@node Dynamic String Input
2895@subsection Dynamically Allocating String Conversions
2896
2897A GNU extension to formatted input lets you safely read a string with no
2898maximum size. Using this feature, you don't supply a buffer; instead,
2899@code{scanf} allocates a buffer big enough to hold the data and gives
2900you its address. To use this feature, write @samp{a} as a flag
2901character, as in @samp{%as} or @samp{%a[0-9a-z]}.
2902
2903The pointer argument you supply for where to store the input should have
2904type @code{char **}. The @code{scanf} function allocates a buffer and
2905stores its address in the word that the argument points to. You should
2906free the buffer with @code{free} when you no longer need it.
2907
2908Here is an example of using the @samp{a} flag with the @samp{%[@dots{}]}
2909conversion specification to read a ``variable assignment'' of the form
2910@samp{@var{variable} = @var{value}}.
2911
2912@smallexample
2913@{
2914 char *variable, *value;
2915
2916 if (2 > scanf ("%a[a-zA-Z0-9] = %a[^\n]\n",
2917 &variable, &value))
2918 @{
2919 invalid_input_error ();
2920 return 0;
2921 @}
2922
2923 @dots{}
2924@}
2925@end smallexample
2926
2927@node Other Input Conversions
2928@subsection Other Input Conversions
2929
2930This section describes the miscellaneous input conversions.
2931
2932The @samp{%p} conversion is used to read a pointer value. It recognizes
04b9968b 2933the same syntax used by the @samp{%p} output conversion for
28f540f4
RM
2934@code{printf} (@pxref{Other Output Conversions}); that is, a hexadecimal
2935number just as the @samp{%x} conversion accepts. The corresponding
2936argument should be of type @code{void **}; that is, the address of a
2937place to store a pointer.
2938
2939The resulting pointer value is not guaranteed to be valid if it was not
2940originally written during the same program execution that reads it in.
2941
2942The @samp{%n} conversion produces the number of characters read so far
2943by this call. The corresponding argument should be of type @code{int *}.
2944This conversion works in the same way as the @samp{%n} conversion for
2945@code{printf}; see @ref{Other Output Conversions}, for an example.
2946
2947The @samp{%n} conversion is the only mechanism for determining the
2948success of literal matches or conversions with suppressed assignments.
2949If the @samp{%n} follows the locus of a matching failure, then no value
2950is stored for it since @code{scanf} returns before processing the
2951@samp{%n}. If you store @code{-1} in that argument slot before calling
2952@code{scanf}, the presence of @code{-1} after @code{scanf} indicates an
2953error occurred before the @samp{%n} was reached.
2954
2955Finally, the @samp{%%} conversion matches a literal @samp{%} character
2956in the input stream, without using an argument. This conversion does
2957not permit any flags, field width, or type modifier to be specified.
2958
2959@node Formatted Input Functions
2960@subsection Formatted Input Functions
2961
2962Here are the descriptions of the functions for performing formatted
2963input.
2964Prototypes for these functions are in the header file @file{stdio.h}.
2965@pindex stdio.h
2966
2967@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 2968@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
2969@deftypefun int scanf (const char *@var{template}, @dots{})
2970The @code{scanf} function reads formatted input from the stream
2971@code{stdin} under the control of the template string @var{template}.
2972The optional arguments are pointers to the places which receive the
2973resulting values.
2974
2975The return value is normally the number of successful assignments. If
04b9968b
UD
2976an end-of-file condition is detected before any matches are performed,
2977including matches against whitespace and literal characters in the
2978template, then @code{EOF} is returned.
28f540f4
RM
2979@end deftypefun
2980
2981@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 2982@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
2983@deftypefun int fscanf (FILE *@var{stream}, const char *@var{template}, @dots{})
2984This function is just like @code{scanf}, except that the input is read
2985from the stream @var{stream} instead of @code{stdin}.
2986@end deftypefun
2987
2988@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 2989@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
2990@deftypefun int sscanf (const char *@var{s}, const char *@var{template}, @dots{})
2991This is like @code{scanf}, except that the characters are taken from the
2992null-terminated string @var{s} instead of from a stream. Reaching the
2993end of the string is treated as an end-of-file condition.
2994
2995The behavior of this function is undefined if copying takes place
2996between objects that overlap---for example, if @var{s} is also given
2997as an argument to receive a string read under control of the @samp{%s}
2998conversion.
2999@end deftypefun
3000
3001@node Variable Arguments Input
3002@subsection Variable Arguments Input Functions
3003
3004The functions @code{vscanf} and friends are provided so that you can
3005define your own variadic @code{scanf}-like functions that make use of
3006the same internals as the built-in formatted output functions.
3007These functions are analogous to the @code{vprintf} series of output
3008functions. @xref{Variable Arguments Output}, for important
3009information on how to use them.
3010
3011@strong{Portability Note:} The functions listed in this section are GNU
3012extensions.
3013
3014@comment stdio.h
3015@comment GNU
3016@deftypefun int vscanf (const char *@var{template}, va_list @var{ap})
04b9968b 3017This function is similar to @code{scanf}, but instead of taking
28f540f4
RM
3018a variable number of arguments directly, it takes an argument list
3019pointer @var{ap} of type @code{va_list} (@pxref{Variadic Functions}).
3020@end deftypefun
3021
3022@comment stdio.h
3023@comment GNU
3024@deftypefun int vfscanf (FILE *@var{stream}, const char *@var{template}, va_list @var{ap})
3025This is the equivalent of @code{fscanf} with the variable argument list
3026specified directly as for @code{vscanf}.
3027@end deftypefun
3028
3029@comment stdio.h
3030@comment GNU
3031@deftypefun int vsscanf (const char *@var{s}, const char *@var{template}, va_list @var{ap})
3032This is the equivalent of @code{sscanf} with the variable argument list
3033specified directly as for @code{vscanf}.
3034@end deftypefun
3035
3036In GNU C, there is a special construct you can use to let the compiler
3037know that a function uses a @code{scanf}-style format string. Then it
3038can check the number and types of arguments in each call to the
3039function, and warn you when they do not match the format string.
04b9968b
UD
3040For details, @xref{Function Attributes, , Declaring Attributes of Functions,
3041gcc.info, Using GNU CC}.
28f540f4
RM
3042
3043@node EOF and Errors
3044@section End-Of-File and Errors
3045
3046@cindex end of file, on a stream
3047Many of the functions described in this chapter return the value of the
3048macro @code{EOF} to indicate unsuccessful completion of the operation.
3049Since @code{EOF} is used to report both end of file and random errors,
3050it's often better to use the @code{feof} function to check explicitly
3051for end of file and @code{ferror} to check for errors. These functions
3052check indicators that are part of the internal state of the stream
3053object, indicators set if the appropriate condition was detected by a
3054previous I/O operation on that stream.
3055
3056These symbols are declared in the header file @file{stdio.h}.
3057@pindex stdio.h
3058
3059@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3060@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3061@deftypevr Macro int EOF
3062This macro is an integer value that is returned by a number of functions
3063to indicate an end-of-file condition, or some other error situation.
3064With the GNU library, @code{EOF} is @code{-1}. In other libraries, its
3065value may be some other negative number.
3066@end deftypevr
3067
28f540f4 3068@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3069@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3070@deftypefun int feof (FILE *@var{stream})
3071The @code{feof} function returns nonzero if and only if the end-of-file
3072indicator for the stream @var{stream} is set.
3073@end deftypefun
3074
3075@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3076@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3077@deftypefun int ferror (FILE *@var{stream})
3078The @code{ferror} function returns nonzero if and only if the error
3079indicator for the stream @var{stream} is set, indicating that an error
3080has occurred on a previous operation on the stream.
3081@end deftypefun
3082
3083In addition to setting the error indicator associated with the stream,
3084the functions that operate on streams also set @code{errno} in the same
3085way as the corresponding low-level functions that operate on file
3086descriptors. For example, all of the functions that perform output to a
3087stream---such as @code{fputc}, @code{printf}, and @code{fflush}---are
3088implemented in terms of @code{write}, and all of the @code{errno} error
3089conditions defined for @code{write} are meaningful for these functions.
3090For more information about the descriptor-level I/O functions, see
3091@ref{Low-Level I/O}.
3092
460e040a
UD
3093@node Error Recovery
3094@section Recovering from errors
3095
7ba73c63 3096You may explicitly clear the error and EOF flags with the @code{clearerr}
460e040a
UD
3097function.
3098
3099@comment stdio.h
3100@comment ISO
3101@deftypefun void clearerr (FILE *@var{stream})
3102This function clears the end-of-file and error indicators for the
3103stream @var{stream}.
3104
3105The file positioning functions (@pxref{File Positioning}) also clear the
3106end-of-file indicator for the stream.
3107@end deftypefun
3108
3109Note that it is @emph{not} correct to just clear the error flag and retry
3110a failed stream operation. After a failed write, any number of
3111characters since the last buffer flush may have been committed to the
3112file, while some buffered data may have been discarded. Merely retrying
3113can thus cause lost or repeated data.
3114
3115A failed read may leave the file pointer in an inappropriate position for
3116a second try. In both cases, you should seek to a known position before
3117retrying.
3118
3119Most errors that can happen are not recoverable --- a second try will
3120always fail again in the same way. So usually it is best to give up and
3121report the error to the user, rather than install complicated recovery
3122logic.
3123
7ba73c63 3124One important exception is @code{EINTR} (@pxref{Interrupted Primitives}).
460e040a
UD
3125Many stream I/O implementations will treat it as an ordinary error, which
3126can be quite inconvenient. You can avoid this hassle by installing all
3127signals with the @code{SA_RESTART} flag.
3128
3129For similar reasons, setting nonblocking I/O on a stream's file
3130descriptor is not usually advisable.
3131
28f540f4
RM
3132@node Binary Streams
3133@section Text and Binary Streams
3134
3135The GNU system and other POSIX-compatible operating systems organize all
3136files as uniform sequences of characters. However, some other systems
3137make a distinction between files containing text and files containing
f65fd747 3138binary data, and the input and output facilities of @w{ISO C} provide for
28f540f4
RM
3139this distinction. This section tells you how to write programs portable
3140to such systems.
3141
3142@cindex text stream
3143@cindex binary stream
3144When you open a stream, you can specify either a @dfn{text stream} or a
3145@dfn{binary stream}. You indicate that you want a binary stream by
3146specifying the @samp{b} modifier in the @var{opentype} argument to
3147@code{fopen}; see @ref{Opening Streams}. Without this
3148option, @code{fopen} opens the file as a text stream.
3149
3150Text and binary streams differ in several ways:
3151
3152@itemize @bullet
3153@item
3154The data read from a text stream is divided into @dfn{lines} which are
3155terminated by newline (@code{'\n'}) characters, while a binary stream is
3156simply a long series of characters. A text stream might on some systems
3157fail to handle lines more than 254 characters long (including the
3158terminating newline character).
3159@cindex lines (in a text file)
3160
3161@item
3162On some systems, text files can contain only printing characters,
3163horizontal tab characters, and newlines, and so text streams may not
3164support other characters. However, binary streams can handle any
3165character value.
3166
3167@item
3168Space characters that are written immediately preceding a newline
3169character in a text stream may disappear when the file is read in again.
3170
3171@item
3172More generally, there need not be a one-to-one mapping between
3173characters that are read from or written to a text stream, and the
3174characters in the actual file.
3175@end itemize
3176
3177Since a binary stream is always more capable and more predictable than a
3178text stream, you might wonder what purpose text streams serve. Why not
3179simply always use binary streams? The answer is that on these operating
3180systems, text and binary streams use different file formats, and the
3181only way to read or write ``an ordinary file of text'' that can work
3182with other text-oriented programs is through a text stream.
3183
3184In the GNU library, and on all POSIX systems, there is no difference
3185between text streams and binary streams. When you open a stream, you
3186get the same kind of stream regardless of whether you ask for binary.
3187This stream can handle any file content, and has none of the
3188restrictions that text streams sometimes have.
3189
3190@node File Positioning
3191@section File Positioning
3192@cindex file positioning on a stream
3193@cindex positioning a stream
3194@cindex seeking on a stream
3195
3196The @dfn{file position} of a stream describes where in the file the
3197stream is currently reading or writing. I/O on the stream advances the
3198file position through the file. In the GNU system, the file position is
3199represented as an integer, which counts the number of bytes from the
3200beginning of the file. @xref{File Position}.
3201
3202During I/O to an ordinary disk file, you can change the file position
3203whenever you wish, so as to read or write any portion of the file. Some
3204other kinds of files may also permit this. Files which support changing
3205the file position are sometimes referred to as @dfn{random-access}
3206files.
3207
3208You can use the functions in this section to examine or modify the file
3209position indicator associated with a stream. The symbols listed below
3210are declared in the header file @file{stdio.h}.
3211@pindex stdio.h
3212
3213@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3214@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3215@deftypefun {long int} ftell (FILE *@var{stream})
3216This function returns the current file position of the stream
3217@var{stream}.
3218
3219This function can fail if the stream doesn't support file positioning,
3220or if the file position can't be represented in a @code{long int}, and
3221possibly for other reasons as well. If a failure occurs, a value of
3222@code{-1} is returned.
3223@end deftypefun
3224
a5a0310d
UD
3225@comment stdio.h
3226@comment Unix98
3227@deftypefun off_t ftello (FILE *@var{stream})
04b9968b
UD
3228The @code{ftello} function is similar to @code{ftell}, except that it
3229returns a value of type @code{off_t}. Systems which support this type
3230use it to describe all file positions, unlike the POSIX specification
3231which uses a long int. The two are not necessarily the same size.
3232Therefore, using ftell can lead to problems if the implementation is
3233written on top of a POSIX compliant low-level I/O implementation, and using
3234@code{ftello} is preferable whenever it is available.
3235
3236If this function fails it returns @code{(off_t) -1}. This can happen due
a5a0310d
UD
3237to missing support for file positioning or internal errors. Otherwise
3238the return value is the current file position.
3239
3240The function is an extension defined in the Unix Single Specification
3241version 2.
a3a4a74e
UD
3242
3243When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a
0be8752b 324432 bit system this function is in fact @code{ftello64}. I.e., the
a3a4a74e
UD
3245LFS interface transparently replaces the old interface.
3246@end deftypefun
3247
3248@comment stdio.h
3249@comment Unix98
3250@deftypefun off64_t ftello64 (FILE *@var{stream})
3251This function is similar to @code{ftello} with the only difference that
3252the return value is of type @code{off64_t}. This also requires that the
3253stream @var{stream} was opened using either @code{fopen64},
3254@code{freopen64}, or @code{tmpfile64} since otherwise the underlying
3255file operations to position the file pointer beyond the @math{2^31}
3256bytes limit might fail.
3257
3258If the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a 32
3259bits machine this function is available under the name @code{ftello}
3260and so transparently replaces the old interface.
a5a0310d
UD
3261@end deftypefun
3262
28f540f4 3263@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3264@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3265@deftypefun int fseek (FILE *@var{stream}, long int @var{offset}, int @var{whence})
3266The @code{fseek} function is used to change the file position of the
3267stream @var{stream}. The value of @var{whence} must be one of the
3268constants @code{SEEK_SET}, @code{SEEK_CUR}, or @code{SEEK_END}, to
3269indicate whether the @var{offset} is relative to the beginning of the
3270file, the current file position, or the end of the file, respectively.
3271
3272This function returns a value of zero if the operation was successful,
3273and a nonzero value to indicate failure. A successful call also clears
3274the end-of-file indicator of @var{stream} and discards any characters
3275that were ``pushed back'' by the use of @code{ungetc}.
3276
3277@code{fseek} either flushes any buffered output before setting the file
3278position or else remembers it so it will be written later in its proper
3279place in the file.
3280@end deftypefun
3281
a5a0310d
UD
3282@comment stdio.h
3283@comment Unix98
3284@deftypefun int fseeko (FILE *@var{stream}, off_t @var{offset}, int @var{whence})
3285This function is similar to @code{fseek} but it corrects a problem with
3286@code{fseek} in a system with POSIX types. Using a value of type
3287@code{long int} for the offset is not compatible with POSIX.
3288@code{fseeko} uses the correct type @code{off_t} for the @var{offset}
3289parameter.
3290
f2ea0f5b 3291For this reason it is a good idea to prefer @code{ftello} whenever it is
a5a0310d
UD
3292available since its functionality is (if different at all) closer the
3293underlying definition.
3294
3295The functionality and return value is the same as for @code{fseek}.
3296
3297The function is an extension defined in the Unix Single Specification
3298version 2.
a3a4a74e
UD
3299
3300When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a
0be8752b 330132 bit system this function is in fact @code{fseeko64}. I.e., the
a3a4a74e
UD
3302LFS interface transparently replaces the old interface.
3303@end deftypefun
3304
3305@comment stdio.h
3306@comment Unix98
3307@deftypefun int fseeko64 (FILE *@var{stream}, off64_t @var{offset}, int @var{whence})
3308This function is similar to @code{fseeko} with the only difference that
3309the @var{offset} parameter is of type @code{off64_t}. This also
3310requires that the stream @var{stream} was opened using either
3311@code{fopen64}, @code{freopen64}, or @code{tmpfile64} since otherwise
3312the underlying file operations to position the file pointer beyond the
3313@math{2^31} bytes limit might fail.
3314
3315If the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a 32
3316bits machine this function is available under the name @code{fseeko}
3317and so transparently replaces the old interface.
a5a0310d
UD
3318@end deftypefun
3319
3320@strong{Portability Note:} In non-POSIX systems, @code{ftell},
3321@code{ftello}, @code{fseek} and @code{fseeko} might work reliably only
3322on binary streams. @xref{Binary Streams}.
28f540f4
RM
3323
3324The following symbolic constants are defined for use as the @var{whence}
3325argument to @code{fseek}. They are also used with the @code{lseek}
3326function (@pxref{I/O Primitives}) and to specify offsets for file locks
3327(@pxref{Control Operations}).
3328
3329@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3330@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3331@deftypevr Macro int SEEK_SET
3332This is an integer constant which, when used as the @var{whence}
a5a0310d
UD
3333argument to the @code{fseek} or @code{fseeko} function, specifies that
3334the offset provided is relative to the beginning of the file.
28f540f4
RM
3335@end deftypevr
3336
3337@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3338@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3339@deftypevr Macro int SEEK_CUR
3340This is an integer constant which, when used as the @var{whence}
a5a0310d
UD
3341argument to the @code{fseek} or @code{fseeko} function, specifies that
3342the offset provided is relative to the current file position.
28f540f4
RM
3343@end deftypevr
3344
3345@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3346@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3347@deftypevr Macro int SEEK_END
3348This is an integer constant which, when used as the @var{whence}
a5a0310d
UD
3349argument to the @code{fseek} or @code{fseeko} function, specifies that
3350the offset provided is relative to the end of the file.
28f540f4
RM
3351@end deftypevr
3352
3353@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3354@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3355@deftypefun void rewind (FILE *@var{stream})
3356The @code{rewind} function positions the stream @var{stream} at the
f2ea0f5b 3357beginning of the file. It is equivalent to calling @code{fseek} or
a5a0310d
UD
3358@code{fseeko} on the @var{stream} with an @var{offset} argument of
3359@code{0L} and a @var{whence} argument of @code{SEEK_SET}, except that
3360the return value is discarded and the error indicator for the stream is
3361reset.
28f540f4
RM
3362@end deftypefun
3363
3364These three aliases for the @samp{SEEK_@dots{}} constants exist for the
3365sake of compatibility with older BSD systems. They are defined in two
3366different header files: @file{fcntl.h} and @file{sys/file.h}.
3367
3368@table @code
3369@comment sys/file.h
3370@comment BSD
3371@item L_SET
3372@vindex L_SET
3373An alias for @code{SEEK_SET}.
3374
3375@comment sys/file.h
3376@comment BSD
3377@item L_INCR
3378@vindex L_INCR
3379An alias for @code{SEEK_CUR}.
3380
3381@comment sys/file.h
3382@comment BSD
3383@item L_XTND
3384@vindex L_XTND
3385An alias for @code{SEEK_END}.
3386@end table
3387
3388@node Portable Positioning
3389@section Portable File-Position Functions
3390
3391On the GNU system, the file position is truly a character count. You
a5a0310d
UD
3392can specify any character count value as an argument to @code{fseek} or
3393@code{fseeko} and get reliable results for any random access file.
3394However, some @w{ISO C} systems do not represent file positions in this
3395way.
28f540f4
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3396
3397On some systems where text streams truly differ from binary streams, it
3398is impossible to represent the file position of a text stream as a count
3399of characters from the beginning of the file. For example, the file
3400position on some systems must encode both a record offset within the
3401file, and a character offset within the record.
3402
3403As a consequence, if you want your programs to be portable to these
3404systems, you must observe certain rules:
3405
3406@itemize @bullet
3407@item
3408The value returned from @code{ftell} on a text stream has no predictable
3409relationship to the number of characters you have read so far. The only
3410thing you can rely on is that you can use it subsequently as the
a5a0310d
UD
3411@var{offset} argument to @code{fseek} or @code{fseeko} to move back to
3412the same file position.
28f540f4 3413
19c3f208 3414@item
a5a0310d 3415In a call to @code{fseek} or @code{fseeko} on a text stream, either the
04b9968b
UD
3416@var{offset} must be zero, or @var{whence} must be @code{SEEK_SET} and
3417and the @var{offset} must be the result of an earlier call to @code{ftell}
3418on the same stream.
28f540f4
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3419
3420@item
3421The value of the file position indicator of a text stream is undefined
3422while there are characters that have been pushed back with @code{ungetc}
3423that haven't been read or discarded. @xref{Unreading}.
3424@end itemize
3425
3426But even if you observe these rules, you may still have trouble for long
3427files, because @code{ftell} and @code{fseek} use a @code{long int} value
3428to represent the file position. This type may not have room to encode
a5a0310d
UD
3429all the file positions in a large file. Using the @code{ftello} and
3430@code{fseeko} functions might help here since the @code{off_t} type is
3431expected to be able to hold all file position values but this still does
3432not help to handle additional information which must be associated with
3433a file position.
28f540f4
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3434
3435So if you do want to support systems with peculiar encodings for the
3436file positions, it is better to use the functions @code{fgetpos} and
3437@code{fsetpos} instead. These functions represent the file position
3438using the data type @code{fpos_t}, whose internal representation varies
3439from system to system.
3440
3441These symbols are declared in the header file @file{stdio.h}.
3442@pindex stdio.h
3443
3444@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3445@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3446@deftp {Data Type} fpos_t
3447This is the type of an object that can encode information about the
3448file position of a stream, for use by the functions @code{fgetpos} and
3449@code{fsetpos}.
3450
3451In the GNU system, @code{fpos_t} is equivalent to @code{off_t} or
3452@code{long int}. In other systems, it might have a different internal
3453representation.
a3a4a74e 3454
0be8752b 3455When compiling with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a 32 bit machine
a3a4a74e
UD
3456this type is in fact equivalent to @code{off64_t} since the LFS
3457interface transparently replaced the old interface.
3458@end deftp
3459
3460@comment stdio.h
3461@comment Unix98
3462@deftp {Data Type} fpos64_t
3463This is the type of an object that can encode information about the
3464file position of a stream, for use by the functions @code{fgetpos64} and
3465@code{fsetpos64}.
3466
3467In the GNU system, @code{fpos64_t} is equivalent to @code{off64_t} or
3468@code{long long int}. In other systems, it might have a different internal
3469representation.
28f540f4
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3470@end deftp
3471
3472@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3473@comment ISO
28f540f4
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3474@deftypefun int fgetpos (FILE *@var{stream}, fpos_t *@var{position})
3475This function stores the value of the file position indicator for the
3476stream @var{stream} in the @code{fpos_t} object pointed to by
3477@var{position}. If successful, @code{fgetpos} returns zero; otherwise
3478it returns a nonzero value and stores an implementation-defined positive
3479value in @code{errno}.
a3a4a74e
UD
3480
3481When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a
0be8752b 348232 bit system the function is in fact @code{fgetpos64}. I.e., the LFS
a3a4a74e
UD
3483interface transparently replaced the old interface.
3484@end deftypefun
3485
3486@comment stdio.h
3487@comment Unix98
3488@deftypefun int fgetpos64 (FILE *@var{stream}, fpos64_t *@var{position})
3489This function is similar to @code{fgetpos} but the file position is
3490returned in a variable of type @code{fpos64_t} to which @var{position}
3491points.
3492
3493If the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a 32
3494bits machine this function is available under the name @code{fgetpos}
3495and so transparently replaces the old interface.
28f540f4
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3496@end deftypefun
3497
3498@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3499@comment ISO
a3a4a74e 3500@deftypefun int fsetpos (FILE *@var{stream}, const fpos_t *@var{position})
28f540f4
RM
3501This function sets the file position indicator for the stream @var{stream}
3502to the position @var{position}, which must have been set by a previous
3503call to @code{fgetpos} on the same stream. If successful, @code{fsetpos}
3504clears the end-of-file indicator on the stream, discards any characters
3505that were ``pushed back'' by the use of @code{ungetc}, and returns a value
3506of zero. Otherwise, @code{fsetpos} returns a nonzero value and stores
3507an implementation-defined positive value in @code{errno}.
a3a4a74e
UD
3508
3509When the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a
0be8752b 351032 bit system the function is in fact @code{fsetpos64}. I.e., the LFS
a3a4a74e
UD
3511interface transparently replaced the old interface.
3512@end deftypefun
3513
3514@comment stdio.h
3515@comment Unix98
3516@deftypefun int fsetpos64 (FILE *@var{stream}, const fpos64_t *@var{position})
3517This function is similar to @code{fsetpos} but the file position used
3518for positioning is provided in a variable of type @code{fpos64_t} to
3519which @var{position} points.
3520
3521If the sources are compiled with @code{_FILE_OFFSET_BITS == 64} on a 32
3522bits machine this function is available under the name @code{fsetpos}
3523and so transparently replaces the old interface.
28f540f4
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3524@end deftypefun
3525
3526@node Stream Buffering
3527@section Stream Buffering
3528
3529@cindex buffering of streams
3530Characters that are written to a stream are normally accumulated and
3531transmitted asynchronously to the file in a block, instead of appearing
3532as soon as they are output by the application program. Similarly,
3533streams often retrieve input from the host environment in blocks rather
3534than on a character-by-character basis. This is called @dfn{buffering}.
3535
3536If you are writing programs that do interactive input and output using
3537streams, you need to understand how buffering works when you design the
3538user interface to your program. Otherwise, you might find that output
3539(such as progress or prompt messages) doesn't appear when you intended
04b9968b 3540it to, or displays some other unexpected behavior.
28f540f4
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3541
3542This section deals only with controlling when characters are transmitted
3543between the stream and the file or device, and @emph{not} with how
3544things like echoing, flow control, and the like are handled on specific
3545classes of devices. For information on common control operations on
3546terminal devices, see @ref{Low-Level Terminal Interface}.
3547
3548You can bypass the stream buffering facilities altogether by using the
3549low-level input and output functions that operate on file descriptors
3550instead. @xref{Low-Level I/O}.
3551
3552@menu
3553* Buffering Concepts:: Terminology is defined here.
3554* Flushing Buffers:: How to ensure that output buffers are flushed.
3555* Controlling Buffering:: How to specify what kind of buffering to use.
3556@end menu
3557
3558@node Buffering Concepts
3559@subsection Buffering Concepts
3560
3561There are three different kinds of buffering strategies:
3562
3563@itemize @bullet
3564@item
3565Characters written to or read from an @dfn{unbuffered} stream are
3566transmitted individually to or from the file as soon as possible.
3567@cindex unbuffered stream
3568
3569@item
3570Characters written to a @dfn{line buffered} stream are transmitted to
3571the file in blocks when a newline character is encountered.
3572@cindex line buffered stream
3573
3574@item
3575Characters written to or read from a @dfn{fully buffered} stream are
3576transmitted to or from the file in blocks of arbitrary size.
3577@cindex fully buffered stream
3578@end itemize
3579
3580Newly opened streams are normally fully buffered, with one exception: a
3581stream connected to an interactive device such as a terminal is
3582initially line buffered. @xref{Controlling Buffering}, for information
3583on how to select a different kind of buffering. Usually the automatic
3584selection gives you the most convenient kind of buffering for the file
3585or device you open.
3586
3587The use of line buffering for interactive devices implies that output
3588messages ending in a newline will appear immediately---which is usually
3589what you want. Output that doesn't end in a newline might or might not
3590show up immediately, so if you want them to appear immediately, you
3591should flush buffered output explicitly with @code{fflush}, as described
3592in @ref{Flushing Buffers}.
3593
3594@node Flushing Buffers
3595@subsection Flushing Buffers
3596
3597@cindex flushing a stream
3598@dfn{Flushing} output on a buffered stream means transmitting all
3599accumulated characters to the file. There are many circumstances when
3600buffered output on a stream is flushed automatically:
3601
3602@itemize @bullet
3603@item
3604When you try to do output and the output buffer is full.
3605
3606@item
3607When the stream is closed. @xref{Closing Streams}.
3608
19c3f208 3609@item
28f540f4
RM
3610When the program terminates by calling @code{exit}.
3611@xref{Normal Termination}.
3612
3613@item
3614When a newline is written, if the stream is line buffered.
3615
3616@item
3617Whenever an input operation on @emph{any} stream actually reads data
3618from its file.
3619@end itemize
3620
3621If you want to flush the buffered output at another time, call
3622@code{fflush}, which is declared in the header file @file{stdio.h}.
3623@pindex stdio.h
3624
3625@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3626@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3627@deftypefun int fflush (FILE *@var{stream})
3628This function causes any buffered output on @var{stream} to be delivered
3629to the file. If @var{stream} is a null pointer, then
3630@code{fflush} causes buffered output on @emph{all} open output streams
3631to be flushed.
3632
3633This function returns @code{EOF} if a write error occurs, or zero
3634otherwise.
3635@end deftypefun
3636
3637@strong{Compatibility Note:} Some brain-damaged operating systems have
3638been known to be so thoroughly fixated on line-oriented input and output
3639that flushing a line buffered stream causes a newline to be written!
3640Fortunately, this ``feature'' seems to be becoming less common. You do
3641not need to worry about this in the GNU system.
3642
3643
3644@node Controlling Buffering
3645@subsection Controlling Which Kind of Buffering
3646
3647After opening a stream (but before any other operations have been
3648performed on it), you can explicitly specify what kind of buffering you
3649want it to have using the @code{setvbuf} function.
3650@cindex buffering, controlling
3651
3652The facilities listed in this section are declared in the header
3653file @file{stdio.h}.
3654@pindex stdio.h
3655
3656@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3657@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3658@deftypefun int setvbuf (FILE *@var{stream}, char *@var{buf}, int @var{mode}, size_t @var{size})
3659This function is used to specify that the stream @var{stream} should
3660have the buffering mode @var{mode}, which can be either @code{_IOFBF}
3661(for full buffering), @code{_IOLBF} (for line buffering), or
3662@code{_IONBF} (for unbuffered input/output).
3663
3664If you specify a null pointer as the @var{buf} argument, then @code{setvbuf}
3665allocates a buffer itself using @code{malloc}. This buffer will be freed
3666when you close the stream.
3667
3668Otherwise, @var{buf} should be a character array that can hold at least
3669@var{size} characters. You should not free the space for this array as
3670long as the stream remains open and this array remains its buffer. You
3671should usually either allocate it statically, or @code{malloc}
3672(@pxref{Unconstrained Allocation}) the buffer. Using an automatic array
3673is not a good idea unless you close the file before exiting the block
3674that declares the array.
3675
3676While the array remains a stream buffer, the stream I/O functions will
3677use the buffer for their internal purposes. You shouldn't try to access
3678the values in the array directly while the stream is using it for
3679buffering.
3680
3681The @code{setvbuf} function returns zero on success, or a nonzero value
3682if the value of @var{mode} is not valid or if the request could not
3683be honored.
3684@end deftypefun
3685
3686@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3687@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3688@deftypevr Macro int _IOFBF
3689The value of this macro is an integer constant expression that can be
3690used as the @var{mode} argument to the @code{setvbuf} function to
3691specify that the stream should be fully buffered.
3692@end deftypevr
3693
3694@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3695@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3696@deftypevr Macro int _IOLBF
3697The value of this macro is an integer constant expression that can be
3698used as the @var{mode} argument to the @code{setvbuf} function to
3699specify that the stream should be line buffered.
3700@end deftypevr
3701
3702@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3703@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3704@deftypevr Macro int _IONBF
3705The value of this macro is an integer constant expression that can be
3706used as the @var{mode} argument to the @code{setvbuf} function to
3707specify that the stream should be unbuffered.
3708@end deftypevr
3709
3710@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3711@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3712@deftypevr Macro int BUFSIZ
3713The value of this macro is an integer constant expression that is good
3714to use for the @var{size} argument to @code{setvbuf}. This value is
3715guaranteed to be at least @code{256}.
3716
3717The value of @code{BUFSIZ} is chosen on each system so as to make stream
19c3f208 3718I/O efficient. So it is a good idea to use @code{BUFSIZ} as the size
28f540f4
RM
3719for the buffer when you call @code{setvbuf}.
3720
3721Actually, you can get an even better value to use for the buffer size
3722by means of the @code{fstat} system call: it is found in the
3723@code{st_blksize} field of the file attributes. @xref{Attribute Meanings}.
3724
3725Sometimes people also use @code{BUFSIZ} as the allocation size of
3726buffers used for related purposes, such as strings used to receive a
3727line of input with @code{fgets} (@pxref{Character Input}). There is no
3728particular reason to use @code{BUFSIZ} for this instead of any other
3729integer, except that it might lead to doing I/O in chunks of an
3730efficient size.
3731@end deftypevr
3732
3733@comment stdio.h
f65fd747 3734@comment ISO
28f540f4
RM
3735@deftypefun void setbuf (FILE *@var{stream}, char *@var{buf})
3736If @var{buf} is a null pointer, the effect of this function is
3737equivalent to calling @code{setvbuf} with a @var{mode} argument of
3738@code{_IONBF}. Otherwise, it is equivalent to calling @code{setvbuf}
3739with @var{buf}, and a @var{mode} of @code{_IOFBF} and a @var{size}
3740argument of @code{BUFSIZ}.
3741
3742The @code{setbuf} function is provided for compatibility with old code;
3743use @code{setvbuf} in all new programs.
3744@end deftypefun
3745
3746@comment stdio.h
3747@comment BSD
3748@deftypefun void setbuffer (FILE *@var{stream}, char *@var{buf}, size_t @var{size})
3749If @var{buf} is a null pointer, this function makes @var{stream} unbuffered.
3750Otherwise, it makes @var{stream} fully buffered using @var{buf} as the
3751buffer. The @var{size} argument specifies the length of @var{buf}.
3752
3753This function is provided for compatibility with old BSD code. Use
3754@code{setvbuf} instead.
3755@end deftypefun
3756
3757@comment stdio.h
3758@comment BSD
3759@deftypefun void setlinebuf (FILE *@var{stream})
3760This function makes @var{stream} be line buffered, and allocates the
3761buffer for you.
3762
3763This function is provided for compatibility with old BSD code. Use
3764@code{setvbuf} instead.
3765@end deftypefun
3766
3767@node Other Kinds of Streams
3768@section Other Kinds of Streams
3769
3770The GNU library provides ways for you to define additional kinds of
3771streams that do not necessarily correspond to an open file.
3772
3773One such type of stream takes input from or writes output to a string.
3774These kinds of streams are used internally to implement the
3775@code{sprintf} and @code{sscanf} functions. You can also create such a
3776stream explicitly, using the functions described in @ref{String Streams}.
3777
3778More generally, you can define streams that do input/output to arbitrary
3779objects using functions supplied by your program. This protocol is
3780discussed in @ref{Custom Streams}.
3781
3782@strong{Portability Note:} The facilities described in this section are
3783specific to GNU. Other systems or C implementations might or might not
3784provide equivalent functionality.
3785
3786@menu
19c3f208 3787* String Streams:: Streams that get data from or put data in
28f540f4
RM
3788 a string or memory buffer.
3789* Obstack Streams:: Streams that store data in an obstack.
3790* Custom Streams:: Defining your own streams with an arbitrary
3791 input data source and/or output data sink.
3792@end menu
3793
3794@node String Streams
3795@subsection String Streams
3796
3797@cindex stream, for I/O to a string
3798@cindex string stream
3799The @code{fmemopen} and @code{open_memstream} functions allow you to do
3800I/O to a string or memory buffer. These facilities are declared in
3801@file{stdio.h}.
3802@pindex stdio.h
3803
3804@comment stdio.h
3805@comment GNU
3806@deftypefun {FILE *} fmemopen (void *@var{buf}, size_t @var{size}, const char *@var{opentype})
3807This function opens a stream that allows the access specified by the
3808@var{opentype} argument, that reads from or writes to the buffer specified
3809by the argument @var{buf}. This array must be at least @var{size} bytes long.
3810
3811If you specify a null pointer as the @var{buf} argument, @code{fmemopen}
04b9968b
UD
3812dynamically allocates an array @var{size} bytes long (as with @code{malloc};
3813@pxref{Unconstrained Allocation}). This is really only useful
28f540f4
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3814if you are going to write things to the buffer and then read them back
3815in again, because you have no way of actually getting a pointer to the
3816buffer (for this, try @code{open_memstream}, below). The buffer is
3817freed when the stream is open.
3818
3819The argument @var{opentype} is the same as in @code{fopen}
8b7fb588 3820(@pxref{Opening Streams}). If the @var{opentype} specifies
28f540f4
RM
3821append mode, then the initial file position is set to the first null
3822character in the buffer. Otherwise the initial file position is at the
3823beginning of the buffer.
3824
3825When a stream open for writing is flushed or closed, a null character
3826(zero byte) is written at the end of the buffer if it fits. You
3827should add an extra byte to the @var{size} argument to account for this.
3828Attempts to write more than @var{size} bytes to the buffer result
3829in an error.
3830
3831For a stream open for reading, null characters (zero bytes) in the
3832buffer do not count as ``end of file''. Read operations indicate end of
3833file only when the file position advances past @var{size} bytes. So, if
3834you want to read characters from a null-terminated string, you should
3835supply the length of the string as the @var{size} argument.
3836@end deftypefun
3837
3838Here is an example of using @code{fmemopen} to create a stream for
3839reading from a string:
3840
3841@smallexample
3842@include memopen.c.texi
3843@end smallexample
3844
3845This program produces the following output:
3846
3847@smallexample
3848Got f
3849Got o
3850Got o
3851Got b
3852Got a
3853Got r
3854@end smallexample
3855
3856@comment stdio.h
3857@comment GNU
3858@deftypefun {FILE *} open_memstream (char **@var{ptr}, size_t *@var{sizeloc})
3859This function opens a stream for writing to a buffer. The buffer is
3860allocated dynamically (as with @code{malloc}; @pxref{Unconstrained
3861Allocation}) and grown as necessary.
3862
3863When the stream is closed with @code{fclose} or flushed with
3864@code{fflush}, the locations @var{ptr} and @var{sizeloc} are updated to
3865contain the pointer to the buffer and its size. The values thus stored
3866remain valid only as long as no further output on the stream takes
3867place. If you do more output, you must flush the stream again to store
3868new values before you use them again.
3869
3870A null character is written at the end of the buffer. This null character
3871is @emph{not} included in the size value stored at @var{sizeloc}.
3872
a5a0310d
UD
3873You can move the stream's file position with @code{fseek} or
3874@code{fseeko} (@pxref{File Positioning}). Moving the file position past
3875the end of the data already written fills the intervening space with
3876zeroes.
28f540f4
RM
3877@end deftypefun
3878
3879Here is an example of using @code{open_memstream}:
3880
3881@smallexample
3882@include memstrm.c.texi
3883@end smallexample
3884
3885This program produces the following output:
3886
3887@smallexample
3888buf = `hello', size = 5
3889buf = `hello, world', size = 12
3890@end smallexample
3891
3892@c @group Invalid outside @example.
3893@node Obstack Streams
3894@subsection Obstack Streams
3895
3896You can open an output stream that puts it data in an obstack.
3897@xref{Obstacks}.
3898
3899@comment stdio.h
3900@comment GNU
3901@deftypefun {FILE *} open_obstack_stream (struct obstack *@var{obstack})
3902This function opens a stream for writing data into the obstack @var{obstack}.
3903This starts an object in the obstack and makes it grow as data is
3904written (@pxref{Growing Objects}).
3905@c @end group Doubly invalid because not nested right.
3906
3907Calling @code{fflush} on this stream updates the current size of the
3908object to match the amount of data that has been written. After a call
3909to @code{fflush}, you can examine the object temporarily.
3910
a5a0310d
UD
3911You can move the file position of an obstack stream with @code{fseek} or
3912@code{fseeko} (@pxref{File Positioning}). Moving the file position past
3913the end of the data written fills the intervening space with zeros.
28f540f4
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3914
3915To make the object permanent, update the obstack with @code{fflush}, and
3916then use @code{obstack_finish} to finalize the object and get its address.
3917The following write to the stream starts a new object in the obstack,
3918and later writes add to that object until you do another @code{fflush}
3919and @code{obstack_finish}.
3920
3921But how do you find out how long the object is? You can get the length
3922in bytes by calling @code{obstack_object_size} (@pxref{Status of an
3923Obstack}), or you can null-terminate the object like this:
3924
3925@smallexample
3926obstack_1grow (@var{obstack}, 0);
3927@end smallexample
3928
3929Whichever one you do, you must do it @emph{before} calling
3930@code{obstack_finish}. (You can do both if you wish.)
3931@end deftypefun
3932
3933Here is a sample function that uses @code{open_obstack_stream}:
3934
3935@smallexample
3936char *
3937make_message_string (const char *a, int b)
3938@{
3939 FILE *stream = open_obstack_stream (&message_obstack);
3940 output_task (stream);
3941 fprintf (stream, ": ");
3942 fprintf (stream, a, b);
3943 fprintf (stream, "\n");
3944 fclose (stream);
3945 obstack_1grow (&message_obstack, 0);
3946 return obstack_finish (&message_obstack);
3947@}
3948@end smallexample
3949
3950@node Custom Streams
3951@subsection Programming Your Own Custom Streams
3952@cindex custom streams
3953@cindex programming your own streams
3954
3955This section describes how you can make a stream that gets input from an
3956arbitrary data source or writes output to an arbitrary data sink
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3957programmed by you. We call these @dfn{custom streams}. The functions
3958and types described here are all GNU extensions.
28f540f4
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3959
3960@c !!! this does not talk at all about the higher-level hooks
3961
3962@menu
3963* Streams and Cookies:: The @dfn{cookie} records where to fetch or
19c3f208 3964 store data that is read or written.
28f540f4 3965* Hook Functions:: How you should define the four @dfn{hook
19c3f208 3966 functions} that a custom stream needs.
28f540f4
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3967@end menu
3968
3969@node Streams and Cookies
3970@subsubsection Custom Streams and Cookies
3971@cindex cookie, for custom stream
3972
3973Inside every custom stream is a special object called the @dfn{cookie}.
3974This is an object supplied by you which records where to fetch or store
3975the data read or written. It is up to you to define a data type to use
3976for the cookie. The stream functions in the library never refer
3977directly to its contents, and they don't even know what the type is;
3978they record its address with type @code{void *}.
3979
3980To implement a custom stream, you must specify @emph{how} to fetch or
3981store the data in the specified place. You do this by defining
3982@dfn{hook functions} to read, write, change ``file position'', and close
3983the stream. All four of these functions will be passed the stream's
3984cookie so they can tell where to fetch or store the data. The library
3985functions don't know what's inside the cookie, but your functions will
3986know.
3987
3988When you create a custom stream, you must specify the cookie pointer,
19c3f208 3989and also the four hook functions stored in a structure of type
28f540f4
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3990@code{cookie_io_functions_t}.
3991
3992These facilities are declared in @file{stdio.h}.
3993@pindex stdio.h
3994
3995@comment stdio.h
3996@comment GNU
3997@deftp {Data Type} {cookie_io_functions_t}
19c3f208 3998This is a structure type that holds the functions that define the
28f540f4
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3999communications protocol between the stream and its cookie. It has
4000the following members:
4001
4002@table @code
4003@item cookie_read_function_t *read
4004This is the function that reads data from the cookie. If the value is a
f2ea0f5b 4005null pointer instead of a function, then read operations on this stream
28f540f4
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4006always return @code{EOF}.
4007
4008@item cookie_write_function_t *write
4009This is the function that writes data to the cookie. If the value is a
4010null pointer instead of a function, then data written to the stream is
4011discarded.
4012
4013@item cookie_seek_function_t *seek
4014This is the function that performs the equivalent of file positioning on
4015the cookie. If the value is a null pointer instead of a function, calls
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4016to @code{fseek} or @code{fseeko} on this stream can only seek to
4017locations within the buffer; any attempt to seek outside the buffer will
4018return an @code{ESPIPE} error.
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4019
4020@item cookie_close_function_t *close
4021This function performs any appropriate cleanup on the cookie when
4022closing the stream. If the value is a null pointer instead of a
4023function, nothing special is done to close the cookie when the stream is
4024closed.
4025@end table
4026@end deftp
4027
4028@comment stdio.h
4029@comment GNU
4030@deftypefun {FILE *} fopencookie (void *@var{cookie}, const char *@var{opentype}, cookie_io_functions_t @var{io-functions})
4031This function actually creates the stream for communicating with the
4032@var{cookie} using the functions in the @var{io-functions} argument.
4033The @var{opentype} argument is interpreted as for @code{fopen};
4034see @ref{Opening Streams}. (But note that the ``truncate on
4035open'' option is ignored.) The new stream is fully buffered.
4036
4037The @code{fopencookie} function returns the newly created stream, or a null
4038pointer in case of an error.
4039@end deftypefun
4040
4041@node Hook Functions
4042@subsubsection Custom Stream Hook Functions
4043@cindex hook functions (of custom streams)
4044
4045Here are more details on how you should define the four hook functions
4046that a custom stream needs.
4047
4048You should define the function to read data from the cookie as:
4049
4050@smallexample
62ecda3d 4051ssize_t @var{reader} (void *@var{cookie}, char *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size})
28f540f4
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4052@end smallexample
4053
4054This is very similar to the @code{read} function; see @ref{I/O
4055Primitives}. Your function should transfer up to @var{size} bytes into
4056the @var{buffer}, and return the number of bytes read, or zero to
4057indicate end-of-file. You can return a value of @code{-1} to indicate
4058an error.
4059
4060You should define the function to write data to the cookie as:
4061
4062@smallexample
62ecda3d 4063ssize_t @var{writer} (void *@var{cookie}, const char *@var{buffer}, size_t @var{size})
28f540f4
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4064@end smallexample
4065
4066This is very similar to the @code{write} function; see @ref{I/O
4067Primitives}. Your function should transfer up to @var{size} bytes from
4068the buffer, and return the number of bytes written. You can return a
4069value of @code{-1} to indicate an error.
4070
4071You should define the function to perform seek operations on the cookie
4072as:
4073
4074@smallexample
4075int @var{seeker} (void *@var{cookie}, fpos_t *@var{position}, int @var{whence})
4076@end smallexample
4077
4078For this function, the @var{position} and @var{whence} arguments are
4079interpreted as for @code{fgetpos}; see @ref{Portable Positioning}. In
4080the GNU library, @code{fpos_t} is equivalent to @code{off_t} or
4081@code{long int}, and simply represents the number of bytes from the
4082beginning of the file.
4083
19c3f208 4084After doing the seek operation, your function should store the resulting
28f540f4
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4085file position relative to the beginning of the file in @var{position}.
4086Your function should return a value of @code{0} on success and @code{-1}
4087to indicate an error.
4088
4089You should define the function to do cleanup operations on the cookie
4090appropriate for closing the stream as:
4091
4092@smallexample
4093int @var{cleaner} (void *@var{cookie})
4094@end smallexample
4095
4096Your function should return @code{-1} to indicate an error, and @code{0}
4097otherwise.
4098
4099@comment stdio.h
4100@comment GNU
4101@deftp {Data Type} cookie_read_function
4102This is the data type that the read function for a custom stream should have.
4103If you declare the function as shown above, this is the type it will have.
4104@end deftp
4105
4106@comment stdio.h
4107@comment GNU
4108@deftp {Data Type} cookie_write_function
4109The data type of the write function for a custom stream.
4110@end deftp
4111
4112@comment stdio.h
4113@comment GNU
4114@deftp {Data Type} cookie_seek_function
4115The data type of the seek function for a custom stream.
4116@end deftp
4117
4118@comment stdio.h
4119@comment GNU
4120@deftp {Data Type} cookie_close_function
4121The data type of the close function for a custom stream.
4122@end deftp
4123
4124@ignore
4125Roland says:
4126
4127@quotation
4128There is another set of functions one can give a stream, the
4129input-room and output-room functions. These functions must
4130understand stdio internals. To describe how to use these
4131functions, you also need to document lots of how stdio works
4132internally (which isn't relevant for other uses of stdio).
4133Perhaps I can write an interface spec from which you can write
4134good documentation. But it's pretty complex and deals with lots
4135of nitty-gritty details. I think it might be better to let this
4136wait until the rest of the manual is more done and polished.
4137@end quotation
4138@end ignore
4139
4140@c ??? This section could use an example.
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4141
4142
4143@node Formatted Messages
4144@section Formatted Messages
4145@cindex formatted messages
4146
4147On systems which are based on System V messages of programs (especially
4148the system tools) are printed in a strict form using the @code{fmtmsg}
4149function. The uniformity sometimes helps the user to interpret messages
cf29ffbe 4150and the strictness tests of the @code{fmtmsg} function ensure that the
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4151programmer follows some minimal requirements.
4152
4153@menu
4154* Printing Formatted Messages:: The @code{fmtmsg} function.
4155* Adding Severity Classes:: Add more severity classes.
4156* Example:: How to use @code{fmtmsg} and @code{addseverity}.
4157@end menu
4158
4159
4160@node Printing Formatted Messages
4161@subsection Printing Formatted Messages
4162
4163Messages can be printed to standard error and/or to the console. To
cf29ffbe 4164select the destination the programmer can use the following two values,
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4165bitwise OR combined if wanted, for the @var{classification} parameter of
4166@code{fmtmsg}:
4167
4168@vtable @code
4169@item MM_PRINT
4170Display the message in standard error.
4171@item MM_CONSOLE
4172Display the message on the system console.
4173@end vtable
4174
f2ea0f5b 4175The erroneous piece of the system can be signalled by exactly one of the
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4176following values which also is bitwise ORed with the
4177@var{classification} parameter to @code{fmtmsg}:
4178
4179@vtable @code
4180@item MM_HARD
4181The source of the condition is some hardware.
4182@item MM_SOFT
4183The source of the condition is some software.
4184@item MM_FIRM
4185The source of the condition is some firmware.
4186@end vtable
4187
4188A third component of the @var{classification} parameter to @code{fmtmsg}
4189can describe the part of the system which detects the problem. This is
4190done by using exactly one of the following values:
4191
4192@vtable @code
4193@item MM_APPL
f2ea0f5b 4194The erroneous condition is detected by the application.
0501d603 4195@item MM_UTIL
f2ea0f5b 4196The erroneous condition is detected by a utility.
0501d603 4197@item MM_OPSYS
f2ea0f5b 4198The erroneous condition is detected by the operating system.
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4199@end vtable
4200
4201A last component of @var{classification} can signal the results of this
4202message. Exactly one of the following values can be used:
4203
4204@vtable @code
4205@item MM_RECOVER
4206It is a recoverable error.
4207@item MM_NRECOV
4208It is a non-recoverable error.
4209@end vtable
4210
4211@comment fmtmsg.h
4212@comment XPG
4213@deftypefun int fmtmsg (long int @var{classification}, const char *@var{label}, int @var{severity}, const char *@var{text}, const char *@var{action}, const char *@var{tag})
4214Display a message described by its parameters on the device(s) specified
4215in the @var{classification} parameter. The @var{label} parameter
4216identifies the source of the message. The string should consist of two
4217colon separated parts where the first part has not more than 10 and the
04b9968b 4218second part not more than 14 characters. The @var{text} parameter
f2ea0f5b 4219describes the condition of the error, the @var{action} parameter possible
0501d603
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4220steps to recover from the error and the @var{tag} parameter is a
4221reference to the online documentation where more information can be
4222found. It should contain the @var{label} value and a unique
4223identification number.
4224
cf29ffbe 4225Each of the parameters can be a special value which means this value
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4226is to be omitted. The symbolic names for these values are:
4227
4228@vtable @code
4229@item MM_NULLLBL
4230Ignore @var{label} parameter.
4231@item MM_NULLSEV
4232Ignore @var{severity} parameter.
4233@item MM_NULLMC
4234Ignore @var{classification} parameter. This implies that nothing is
4235actually printed.
4236@item MM_NULLTXT
4237Ignore @var{text} parameter.
4238@item MM_NULLACT
4239Ignore @var{action} parameter.
4240@item MM_NULLTAG
4241Ignore @var{tag} parameter.
4242@end vtable
4243
cf29ffbe 4244There is another way certain fields can be omitted from the output to
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4245standard error. This is described below in the description of
4246environment variables influencing the behaviour.
4247
4248The @var{severity} parameter can have one of the values in the following
4249table:
4250@cindex severity class
4251
4252@vtable @code
4253@item MM_NOSEV
4254Nothing is printed, this value is the same as @code{MM_NULLSEV}.
4255@item MM_HALT
4256This value is printed as @code{HALT}.
4257@item MM_ERROR
4258This value is printed as @code{ERROR}.
4259@item MM_WARNING
4260This value is printed as @code{WARNING}.
4261@item MM_INFO
4262This value is printed as @code{INFO}.
4263@end vtable
4264
4265The numeric value of these five macros are between @code{0} and
4266@code{4}. Using the environment variable @code{SEV_LEVEL} or using the
4267@code{addseverity} function one can add more severity levels with their
4268corresponding string to print. This is described below
4269(@pxref{Adding Severity Classes}).
4270
4271@noindent
4272If no parameter is ignored the output looks like this:
4273
4274@smallexample
4275@var{label}: @var{severity-string}: @var{text}
4276TO FIX: @var{action} @var{tag}
4277@end smallexample
4278
4279The colons, new line characters and the @code{TO FIX} string are
4280inserted if necessary, i.e., if the corresponding parameter is not
4281ignored.
4282
4283This function is specified in the X/Open Portability Guide. It is also
04b9968b 4284available on all systems derived from System V.
0501d603 4285
cf29ffbe 4286The function returns the value @code{MM_OK} if no error occurred. If
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4287only the printing to standard error failed, it returns @code{MM_NOMSG}.
4288If printing to the console fails, it returns @code{MM_NOCON}. If
cf29ffbe 4289nothing is printed @code{MM_NOTOK} is returned. Among situations where
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4290all outputs fail this last value is also returned if a parameter value
4291is incorrect.
4292@end deftypefun
4293
4294There are two environment variables which influence the behaviour of
4295@code{fmtmsg}. The first is @code{MSGVERB}. It is used to control the
4296output actually happening on standard error (@emph{not} the console
04b9968b 4297output). Each of the five fields can explicitly be enabled. To do
0501d603 4298this the user has to put the @code{MSGVERB} variable with a format like
cf29ffbe 4299the following in the environment before calling the @code{fmtmsg} function
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4300the first time:
4301
4302@smallexample
4303MSGVERB=@var{keyword}[:@var{keyword}[:...]]
4304@end smallexample
4305
4306Valid @var{keyword}s are @code{label}, @code{severity}, @code{text},
4307@code{action}, and @code{tag}. If the environment variable is not given
4308or is the empty string, a not supported keyword is given or the value is
4309somehow else invalid, no part of the message is masked out.
4310
4311The second environment variable which influences the behaviour of
4312@code{fmtmsg} is @code{SEV_LEVEL}. This variable and the change in the
4313behaviour of @code{fmtmsg} is not specified in the X/Open Portability
4314Guide. It is available in System V systems, though. It can be used to
cf29ffbe 4315introduce new severity levels. By default, only the five severity levels
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4316described above are available. Any other numeric value would make
4317@code{fmtmsg} print nothing.
4318
4319If the user puts @code{SEV_LEVEL} with a format like
4320
4321@smallexample
4322SEV_LEVEL=[@var{description}[:@var{description}[:...]]]
4323@end smallexample
4324
4325@noindent
4326in the environment of the process before the first call to
4327@code{fmtmsg}, where @var{description} has a value of the form
4328
4329@smallexample
4330@var{severity-keyword},@var{level},@var{printstring}
4331@end smallexample
4332
4333The @var{severity-keyword} part is not used by @code{fmtmsg} but it has
4334to be present. The @var{level} part is a string representation of a
4335number. The numeric value must be a number greater than 4. This value
4336must be used in the @var{severity} parameter of @code{fmtmsg} to select
4337this class. It is not possible to overwrite any of the predefined
4338classes. The @var{printstring} is the string printed when a message of
4339this class is processed by @code{fmtmsg} (see above, @code{fmtsmg} does
4340not print the numeric value but instead the string representation).
4341
4342
4343@node Adding Severity Classes
4344@subsection Adding Severity Classes
4345@cindex severity class
4346
04b9968b 4347There is another possibility to introduce severity classes besides using
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4348the environment variable @code{SEV_LEVEL}. This simplifies the task of
4349introducing new classes in a running program. One could use the
4350@code{setenv} or @code{putenv} function to set the environment variable,
cf29ffbe 4351but this is toilsome.
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4352
4353@deftypefun int addseverity (int @var{severity}, const char *@var{string})
04b9968b 4354This function allows the introduction of new severity classes which can be
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4355addressed by the @var{severity} parameter of the @code{fmtmsg} function.
4356The @var{severity} parameter of @code{addseverity} must match the value
04b9968b 4357for the parameter with the same name of @code{fmtmsg}, and @var{string}
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4358is the string printed in the actual messages instead of the numeric
4359value.
4360
4361If @var{string} is @code{NULL} the severity class with the numeric value
4362according to @var{severity} is removed.
4363
cf29ffbe
UD
4364It is not possible to overwrite or remove one of the default severity
4365classes. All calls to @code{addseverity} with @var{severity} set to one
4366of the values for the default classes will fail.
4367
0501d603
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4368The return value is @code{MM_OK} if the task was successfully performed.
4369If the return value is @code{MM_NOTOK} something went wrong. This could
4370mean that no more memory is available or a class is not available when
4371it has to be removed.
4372
4373This function is not specified in the X/Open Portability Guide although
cf29ffbe 4374the @code{fmtsmg} function is. It is available on System V systems.
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4375@end deftypefun
4376
4377
4378@node Example
4379@subsection How to use @code{fmtmsg} and @code{addseverity}
4380
4381Here is a simple example program to illustrate the use of the both
4382functions described in this section.
4383
4384@smallexample
4385@include fmtmsgexpl.c.texi
4386@end smallexample
4387
04b9968b
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4388The second call to @code{fmtmsg} illustrates a use of this function as
4389it usually occurs on System V systems, which heavily use this function.
4390It seems worthwhile to give a short explanation here of how this system
4391works on System V. The value of the
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4392@var{label} field (@code{UX:cat}) says that the error occured in the
4393Unix program @code{cat}. The explanation of the error follows and the
4394value for the @var{action} parameter is @code{"refer to manual"}. One
04b9968b 4395could be more specific here, if necessary. The @var{tag} field contains,
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4396as proposed above, the value of the string given for the @var{label}
4397parameter, and additionally a unique ID (@code{001} in this case). For
4398a GNU environment this string could contain a reference to the
4399corresponding node in the Info page for the program.
4400
4401@noindent
4402Running this program without specifying the @code{MSGVERB} and
4403@code{SEV_LEVEL} function produces the following output:
4404
4405@smallexample
4406UX:cat: NOTE2: invalid syntax
4407TO FIX: refer to manual UX:cat:001
4408@end smallexample
4409
4410We see the different fields of the message and how the extra glue (the
4411colons and the @code{TO FIX} string) are printed. But only one of the
4412three calls to @code{fmtmsg} produced output. The first call does not
4413print anything because the @var{label} parameter is not in the correct
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4414form. The string must contain two fields, separated by a colon
4415(@pxref{Printing Formatted Messages}). The third @code{fmtmsg} call
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4416produced no output since the class with the numeric value @code{6} is
4417not defined. Although a class with numeric value @code{5} is also not
04b9968b 4418defined by default, the call to @code{addseverity} introduces it and
0ea554bf 4419the second call to @code{fmtmsg} produces the above output.
0501d603
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4420
4421When we change the environment of the program to contain
4422@code{SEV_LEVEL=XXX,6,NOTE} when running it we get a different result:
4423
4424@smallexample
4425UX:cat: NOTE2: invalid syntax
4426TO FIX: refer to manual UX:cat:001
4427label:foo: NOTE: text
4428TO FIX: action tag
4429@end smallexample
4430
04b9968b 4431Now the third call to @code{fmtmsg} produced some output and we see how
0501d603
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4432the string @code{NOTE} from the environment variable appears in the
4433message.
4434
04b9968b 4435Now we can reduce the output by specifying which fields we are
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4436interested in. If we additionally set the environment variable
4437@code{MSGVERB} to the value @code{severity:label:action} we get the
4438following output:
4439
4440@smallexample
4441UX:cat: NOTE2
4442TO FIX: refer to manual
4443label:foo: NOTE
4444TO FIX: action
4445@end smallexample
4446
4447@noindent
4448I.e., the output produced by the @var{text} and the @var{tag} parameters
cf29ffbe 4449to @code{fmtmsg} vanished. Please also note that now there is no colon
0501d603 4450after the @code{NOTE} and @code{NOTE2} strings in the output. This is
04b9968b 4451not necessary since there is no more output on this line because the text
0501d603 4452is missing.