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     PRINTF(S)                 UNIX System V                 PRINTF(S)



     Name
          printf, fprintf, sprintf - print formatted output

     Syntax
          #include <stdio.h>

          int printf (format , arg ...  )
          char *format;

          int fprintf (stream, format , arg ...  )
          FILE *stream;
          char *format;

          int sprintf (s, format [ , arg ] ...  )
          char *s, *format;

     Description
          The printf function places output on the standard output
          stream stdout.  fprintf places output on the named output
          stream.  sprintf places ``output,'' followed by the null
          character (\0), in consecutive bytes starting at *s; it is
          the user's responsibility to ensure that enough storage is
          available.  Each function returns the number of characters
          transmitted (not including the \0 in the case of sprintf),
          or a negative value if an output error was encountered.

          Each of these functions converts, formats, and prints its
          args under control of the format.  The format is a character
          string that contains three types of objects: plain
          characters, which are simply copied to the output stream;
          escape sequences that represent non-graphic characters; and
          conversion specifications, each of which results in fetching
          of zero or more args.  The results are undefined if there
          are insufficient args for the format.  If the format is
          exhausted while args remain, the excess args are simply
          ignored.

          Each conversion specification is introduced by the character
          %.  After the %, the following appear in sequence:

               Zero or more flags, which modify the meaning of the
               conversion specification.

               An optional, decimal digit string specifying a minimum
               field width.  If the converted value has fewer
               characters than the field width, it will be padded on
               the left (or right, if the left-adjustment flag `-',
               described below, has been given) to the field width.
               The padding is with blanks unless the field width digit
               string starts with a zero, in which case the padding is
               with zeros.

               A precision that gives the minimum number of digits to
               appear for the d, i, o, u, x, or X conversions, the
               number of digits to appear after the decimal point for
               the e, E, and f conversions, the maximum number of
               significant digits for the g and G conversion, or the
               maximum number of characters to be printed from a
               string in s conversion.  The precision takes the form
               of a period (.) followed by a decimal digit string; a
               null digit string is treated as zero.  Padding
               specified  by the precision overrides the padding
               specified by the field width.

               An optional l (ell) specifying that a following d, i,
               o, u, x, or X conversion character applies to a long
               integer arg.  An l before any other conversion
               character is ignored.

               A character that indicates the type of conversion to be
               applied.

          A field width or precision or both may be indicated by an
          asterisk (*) instead of a digit string.  In this case, an
          integer arg supplies the field width or precision.  The arg
          that is actually converted is not fetched until the
          conversion letter is seen, so the args specifying field
          width or precision must appear before the arg (if any) to be
          converted.  A negative field width argument is taken as a
          `-' flag followed by a positive field width. If the
          precision argument is negative, it will be changed to zero.

          The flag characters and their meanings are:


          -  The result of the conversion will be left-justified
             within the field.

          +  The result of a signed conversion will always begin with
             a sign (+ or -).

          Space
             If the first character of a signed conversion is not a
             sign, a blank will be prefixed to the result.  This
             implies that if the blank and + flags both appear, the
             blank flag will be ignored.

          #  This flag specifies that the value is to be converted to
             an ``alternate form.''  For c, d, i, s, and u
             conversions, the flag has no effect.  For o conversion,
             it increases the precision to force the first digit of
             the result to be a zero.  For x or X conversion, a non-
             zero result will have 0x or 0X prefixed to it.  For e, E,
             f, g, and G conversions, the result will always contain a
             decimal point, even if no digits follow the point
             (normally, a decimal point appears in the result of these
             conversions only if a digit follows it).  For g and G
             conversions, trailing zeroes will not be removed from the
             result (which they normally are).

          The conversion characters and their meanings are:

          d,i,o,u,x,X
                    The integer arg is converted to signed decimal (d
                    or i), unsigned octal, (o), decimal (u), or
                    hexadecimal notation (x or X), respectively; the
                    letters abcdef are used for x conversion and the
                    letters ABCDEF for X conversion.  The precision
                    specifies the minimum number of digits to appear;
                    if the value being converted can be represented in
                    fewer digits, it will be expanded with leading
                    zeroes.  The default precision is 1.  The result
                    of converting a zero value with a precision of
                    zero is a null string.

          f         The float or double arg is converted to decimal
                    notation in the style ``[-]ddd.ddd,'' where the
                    number of digits after the decimal point is equal
                    to the precision specification.  If the precision
                    is missing, six digits are output; if the
                    precision is explicitly 0, no decimal point
                    appears.

          e,E       The float or double arg is converted in the style
                    ``[-]d.ddde_dd,'' where there is one digit before
                    the decimal point and the number of digits after
                    it is equal to the precision; when the precision
                    is missing, six digits are produced; if the
                    precision is zero, no decimal point appears.  The
                    E format code will produce a number with E instead
                    of e introducing the exponent.  The exponent
                    always contains at least two digits.

          g,G       The float or double arg is printed in style f or e
                    (or in style E in the case of a G format code),
                    with the precision specifying the number of
                    significant digits.  The style used depends on the
                    value converted: style e will be used only if the
                    exponent resulting from the conversion is less
                    than -4 or greater than the precision.  Trailing
                    zeroes are removed from the result; a decimal
                    point appears only if it is followed by a digit.

          c         The character arg is printed.

          s         The arg is taken to be a string (character
                    pointer) and characters from the string are
                    printed until a null character (\0) is encountered
                    or the number of characters indicated by the
                    precision specification is reached.  If the
                    precision is missing, it is taken to be infinite,
                    so all characters up to the first null character
                    are printed.  A NULL value for arg will yield
                    undefined results.

          %         Print a %; no argument is converted.

          In printing floating point types (float and double), if the
          exponent is 0x7FF and the mantissa is not equal to zero,
          then the output is

               [-]NaN0xdddddddd

          where 0xdddddddd is the hexadecimal representation of the
          leftmost 32 bits of the mantissa.  If the mantissa is zero,
          the output is

               [_]inf.

          In no case does a nonexistent or small field width cause
          truncation of a field; if the result of a conversion is
          wider than the field width, the field is simply expanded to
          contain the conversion result.  Characters generated by
          printf and fprintf are printed as if putc(S) had been
          called.

     Examples
          To print a date and time in the form ``Sunday, July 3,
          10:02,'' where weekday and month are pointers to null-
          terminated strings:

               printf("%s, %s %i, %d:%.2d", weekday, month, day, hour, min);

          To print pi to 5 decimal places:

               printf("pi = %.5f", 4 * atan(1.0));

     See Also
          ecvt(S), putc(S), scanf(S), stdio(S)

     Standards Conformance
          fprintf, printf and sprintf are conformant with:
          AT&T SVID Issue 2, Select Code 307-127;
          The X/Open Portability Guide II of January 1987;
          ANSI X3.159-198X C Language Draft Standard, May 13,
          1988;
          IEEE POSIX Std 1003.1-1988 with C Standard Language-
          Dependent System Support;
          and NIST FIPS 151-1.


                                             (printed 6/20/89)



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