ecvt(3) DG/UX 4.30 ecvt(3)
NAME
ecvt, fcvt, gcvt - convert floating-point number to string
SYNOPSIS
char *ecvt (value, ndigit, decpt, sign)
double value;
int ndigit, *decpt, *sign;
char *fcvt (value, ndigit, decpt, sign)
double value;
int ndigit, *decpt, *sign;
char *gcvt (value, ndigit, buf)
double value;
int ndigit;
char *buf;
DESCRIPTION
Ecvt converts value to a null-terminated string of ndigit
digits and returns a pointer thereto. The decimal point is
not included in the returned string. The high-order digit
is non-zero, unless the value is zero. The low-order digit
is rounded. The position of the decimal point relative to
the beginning of the string is stored indirectly through
decpt (negative means to the left of the returned digits).
If the sign of the result is negative, the word pointed to
by sign is non-zero; otherwise, it is zero.
Fcvt performs the same conversion as ecvt, but ndigit
specifies the number of places to the right of the implied
decimal point to be used, rather than the total number of
places. So, where ecvt(12.3456, 3, decpt, sign) returns a
pointer to character string 123\0, fcvt(12.3456, 3, decpt,
sign) returns a pointer to character string 123456\0.
Gcvt converts the value to a null-terminated string in the
array pointed to by buf and returns buf. It tries to
produce ndigit significant digits in FORTRAN F-format if
possible. If it cannot, it produces E-format, ready for
printing. A minus sign or a decimal point will be included
as part of the returned string. Trailing zeros are
suppressed.
SEE ALSO
printf(3S).
CAVEATS
The values returned by ecvt and fcvt point to a single
static data array whose content is overwritten by each call.
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