SCANF(3S) DOMAIN/IX SYS5 SCANF(3S)
NAME
scanf, fscanf, sscanf - convert formatted input
USAGE
#include <stdio.h>
int scanf(format [, pointer ] ...)
char *format;
int fscanf(stream, format [, pointer ] ...)
FILE *stream;
char *format;
int sscanf(s, format [, pointer ] ...)
char *s, *format;
DESCRIPTION
Scanf reads from the standard input stream stdin. Fscanf
reads from the named input stream. Sscanf reads from the
character string s. Each function reads characters, inter-
prets them according to a format, and stores the results in
its arguments. Each expects, as arguments, a control string
format described below, and a set of pointer arguments that
indicate where the converted input should be stored.
The control string usually contains conversion specifica-
tions, which are used to direct interpretation of input
sequences. The control string may contain:
⊕ White-space characters (blanks, tabs, newlines, or form-
feeds) which, except in two cases described below, cause
input to be read up to the next non-white-space charac-
ter.
⊕ An ordinary character (not %), which must match the next
character of the input stream.
⊕ Conversion specifications, consisting of the character %,
an optional assignment-suppressing character *, an
optional numerical maximum field width, an optional l
(lowercase L) or h indicating the size of the receiving
variable, and a conversion code.
A conversion specification directs the conversion of the
next input field; the result is placed in the variable
pointed to by the corresponding argument, unless assignment
suppression was indicated by *. The suppression of assign-
ment provides a way of describing an input field that is to
be skipped. An input field is defined as a string of non-
space characters; it extends to the next inappropriate
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character or until the field width, if specified, is
exhausted. For all descriptors except "[" and "c", white
space leading an input field is ignored.
CONVERSION SPECIFICATIONS
The conversion code indicates the interpretation of the
input field; the corresponding pointer argument must usually
be of a restricted type. For a suppressed field, no pointer
argument is given. The following conversion codes are
legal:
% a single % is expected in the input at this point; no
assignment is done.
d a decimal integer is expected; the corresponding argu-
ment should be an integer pointer.
u an unsigned decimal integer is expected; the
corresponding argument should be an unsigned integer
pointer.
o an octal integer is expected; the corresponding argu-
ment should be an integer pointer.
x a hexadecimal integer is expected; the corresponding
argument should be an integer pointer.
e, f, g
a floating point number is expected; the next field is
converted accordingly and stored through the
corresponding argument, which should be a pointer to a
float. The input format for floating point numbers is
an optionally signed string of digits, possibly con-
taining a decimal point, followed by an optional
exponent field consisting of an E or an e, followed by
an optional +, -, or space, followed by an integer.
s a character string is expected; the corresponding argu-
ment should be a character pointer pointing to an array
of characters large enough to accept the string and a
terminating NULL (\0), which will be added automati-
cally. The input field is terminated by a white-space
character.
c a character is expected; the corresponding argument
should be a character pointer. The normal skip over
white space is suppressed in this case; to read the
next non-space character, use %1s. If a field width is
given, the corresponding argument should refer to a
character array; the indicated number of characters is
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read.
[ indicates string data and the normal skip over leading
white space is suppressed. The left bracket is fol-
lowed by a set of characters, known as the "scanset,"
and a right bracket; the input field is the maximal
sequence of input characters consisting entirely of
characters in the scanset. The circumflex (^), when it
appears as the first character in the scanset, serves
as a complement operator and redefines the scanset as
the set of all characters not contained in the
remainder of the scanset string. There are some con-
ventions used in the construction of the scanset. A
range of characters may be represented by the construct
first-last, thus [0123456789] may be expressed [0-9].
Using this convention, first must be lexically less
than or equal to last, or else the dash will stand for
itself. The dash will also stand for itself whenever
it is the first or the last character in the scanset.
To include the right square bracket as an element of
the scanset, it must appear as the first character
(possibly preceded by a circumflex) of the scanset, and
in this case it will not be syntactically interpreted
as the closing bracket. The corresponding argument
must point to a character array large enough to hold
the data field and the terminating \0, which will be
added automatically. At least one character must match
for this conversion to be considered successful.
The conversion characters d, u, o, and x may be preceded by
l or h to indicate that a pointer to long or to short rather
than to int is in the argument list. Similarly, the conver-
sion characters e, f, and g may be preceded by l to indicate
that a pointer to double rather than to float is in the
argument list. The l or h modifier is ignored for other
conversion characters.
Scanf conversion terminates at EOF, at the end of the con-
trol string, or when an input character conflicts with the
control string. In the latter case, the bad character is
left unread in the input stream.
Scanf returns the number of successfully matched and
assigned input items; this number can be zero in the event
of an early conflict between an input character and the con-
trol string. If the input ends before the first conflict or
conversion, EOF is returned.
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EXAMPLES
The call:
int i, n; float x; char name[50];
n = scanf("%d%f%s", &i, &x, name);
given the input line:
25 54.32E-1 tuna
will assign to n the value 3, to i the value 25, to x the
value 5.432, and name will contain tuna\0. The call:
int i; float x; char name[50];
(void) scanf("%2d%f%*d %[0-9]", &i, &x, name);
reading input:
56789 0123 56a72
will assign 56 to i, 789.0 to x, skip 0123, and place the
string 56\0 in name. The next call to getchar (see
getc(3S)) will return a.
NOTES
The success of literal matches and suppressed assignments
can not be determined directly.
Trailing white space (including a newline) is left unread,
unless explicitly matched in the control string.
DIAGNOSTICS
These functions return EOF on end of input and a short count
for missing or illegal data items.
RELATED INFORMATION
getc(3S), printf(3S), strtod(3C), strtol(3C)
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