Compaq C
Compaq C Run-Time Library Reference Manual for
OpenVMS Systems
Remarks
- You can change the delimiters of the input field with the bracket
([ ]) conversion specification. Otherwise, an input field is defined as
a string of nonwhite-space characters. It extends either to the next
white-space character or until the field width, if specified, is
exhausted. The function reads across line and record boundaries, since
the new-line character is a white-space character.
- A call to one of the input conversion functions resumes searching
immediately after the last character processed by a previous call.
- If the assignment-suppression character (*) appears in the format
specification, no assignment is made. The corresponding input field is
interpreted and then skipped.
- The arguments must be pointers or other address-valued expressions,
since Compaq C permits only calls by value. To read a number in
decimal format and assign its value to n, you must use the following
form:
You cannot use the following form:
- White space in a format specification matches optional white space
in the input field. Consider the following format specification:
This format specification matches the following forms:
field = 5218
field=5218
field= 5218
field =5218
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These forms do not match the following example:
2.4.2 Converting Output Information
The format specification string for the output of information can
contain:
- Ordinary characters, which are copied to the output.
- Conversion specifications, each of which causes the conversion of a
corresponding output source to a character string in a particular
format Conversion specifications are matched to output sources in
left-to-right order.
A conversion specification consists of the following, in the order
listed:
- A percent character (%) or the sequence %n$.
The
sequence %n$ denotes that the conversion is applied to the
nth output source listed, where n is a decimal
integer between [1, NL_ARGMAX] (see the
<limits.h>
header file). For example, a conversion specification beginning %5$
means that the conversion will be applied to the 5th output source
listed after the format specification. If the conversion
specification does not begin with the sequence %n$, the
conversion specification is matched to its output source in
left-to-right order. You should only use one type of conversion
specification (% or %n$) in a format specification.
- One or more optional characters (described in Table 2-4).
- A conversion specifier (described in Table 2-5) concludes the
conversion specification.
For examples of conversion specifications, see the sample programs in
Section 2.6.
Table 2-4 shows the characters you can use between the percent sign
(%) (or the sequence %n$) and the conversion specifier. These
characters are optional, but if specified, they must occur in the order
shown in Table 2-4.
Table 2-4 Optional Characters Between% (or% n$) and the Output Conversion Specifier
Character |
Meaning |
flags
|
You can use the following flag characters, alone or in any combined
order, to modify the conversion specification:
' (single quote)
|
Requests that a numeric conversion is formatted with the thousands
separator character. Only the numbers to the left of the radix
character are formatted with the separator character. The character
used as a separator and the positioning of the separators are defined
in the program's current locale.
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-- (hyphen)
|
Left-justifies the converted output source in its field.
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+
|
Requests that an explicit sign be present on a signed conversion. If
this flag is not specified, the result of a signed conversion begins
with a sign only when a negative value is converted.
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space
|
Prefixes a space to the result of a signed conversion, if the first
character of the conversion is not a sign, or if the conversion results
in no characters. If you specify both the
space and the + flag, the
space flag is ignored.
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|
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#
|
Requests an alternate conversion format. Depending on the conversion
specified, different actions will occur.
For the o (octal) conversion, the precision is increased to force
the first digit to be a zero.
For the x (or X) conversion, a nonzero result is prefixed with 0x
(or 0X).
For e, E, f, g, and G conversions, the result contains a decimal
point even at the end of an integer value.
For g and G conversions, trailing zeros are not trimmed.
For other conversions, the effect of # is undefined.
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0
|
Uses zeros rather than spaces to pad the field width for d, i, o, u, x,
X, e, E, f, g, and G conversions. If both the 0 and the -- flags are
specified, then the 0 flag is ignored. For d, i, o, u, x, and X
conversions, if a precision is specified, the 0 flag is ignored. For
other conversions, the behavior of the 0 flag is undefined.
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field width
|
The minimum field width can be designated by a decimal integer
constant, or by an output source. To specify an output source, use an
asterisk (*) or the sequence *
n$, where
n refers to the
nth output source listed after the format specification.
The minimum field width is considered after the conversion is done
according to the all other components of the format directive. This
component affects padding the result of the conversion as follows:
If the result of the conversion is wider than the minimum field,
write it out.
If the result of the conversion is narrower than the minimum width,
pad it to make up the field width. Pad with spaces by default. Pad with
zeros if the 0 flag is specified; this does not mean that the width is
an octal number. Padding is on the left by default, and on the right if
a minus sign is specified.
For the wide-character output functions, the field width is measured
in wide characters; for the byte output functions, it is measured in
bytes.
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. (period)
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Separates the field width from the precision.
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precision
|
The precision defines any of the following:
- Minimum number of digits to appear for d, i, o, u, x, and X
conversions
- Number of digits to appear after the decimal-point character for e,
E, and f conversions
- Maximum number of significant digits for g and G conversions
- Maximum number of characters to be written from a string in an s or
S conversion
If a precision appears with any other conversion specifier, the
behavior is undefined.
Precision can be designated by a decimal integer constant, or by an
output source. To specify an output source, use an asterisk (*) or the
sequence *
n$, where
n refers to the
nth output source listed after the format specification.
If only the period is specified, the precision is taken as 0.
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h, l, or L (or ll)
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An h specifies that a following d, i, o, u, x, or X conversion
specifier applies to a
short int
or
unsigned short int
argument; an h can also specify that a following n conversion specifier
applies to a pointer to a
short int
argument.
An l (lowercase ell) specifies that a following d, i, o, u, x, or X
conversion specifier applies to a
long int
or
unsigned long int
argument; an l can also specify that a following n conversion specifier
applies to a pointer to a
long int
argument.
On
OpenVMS Alpha systems, an L or ll (two lowercase ells)
specifies that a following d, i, o, u, x, or X conversion specifier
applies to an
__int64
or
unsigned __int64
argument. (ALPHA ONLY)
An L specifies that a following e, E, f, g, or G conversion
specifier applies to a
long double
argument.
An l specifies that a following c or s conversion specifier applies
to a
wchar_t
argument.
If an h, l, or L appears with any other conversion specifier, the
behavior is undefined.
On
OpenVMS VAX and
OpenVMS Alpha systems, Compaq C
int
values are equivalent to
long
values.
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Table 2-5 decribes the conversion specifiers for formatted output.
Table 2-5 Conversion Specifiers for Formatted Output
Specifier |
Output Type1 |
Description |
d, i
|
|
Converts an
int
argument to signed decimal format.
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o
|
|
Converts an
unsigned int
argument to unsigned octal format.
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u
|
|
Converts an
unsigned int
argument to unsigned decimal format (giving a number in the range 0 to
4,294,967,295).
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x, X
|
|
Converts an
unsigned int
argument to unsigned hexadecimal format (with or without a leading 0x).
The letters
abcdef
are used for
x
conversion, and the letters
ABCDEF
are used for
X
conversion.
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f
|
|
Converts a
float
or
double
argument to the format [--]mmm.nnnnnn. The number of n's is equal to
the precision specification:
- If no precision is specified, the default is 6.
- If the precision is 0 and the # flag is specified, the decimal
point appears but no n's appear.
- If the precision is 0 and the # flag is not specified, the decimal
point also does not appear.
- If a decimal point appears, at least one digit appears before it.
The value is rounded to the appropriate number of digits.
|
e, E
|
|
Converts a
float
or
double
argument to the format [--]m.nnnnnnE<pm symbol>xx. The number of
n's is specified by the precision. If no precision is specified, the
default is 6. If the precision is explicitly 0 and the # flag is
specified, the decimal point appears but no n's appear. If the
precision is explicitly 0 and the # flag is not specified, the decimal
point also does not appear. An 'e' is printed for e conversion; an 'E'
is printed for E conversion. The exponent always contains at least two
digits. If the value is 0, the exponent is 0.
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g, G
|
|
Converts a
float
or
double
argument to format f or e (or E if the G conversion specifier is used),
with the precision specifying the number of significant digits. If the
precision is 0, it is taken as 1. The format used depends on the value
of the argument: format e (or E) is used only if the exponent resulting
from such a conversion is less than --4, or is greater than or equal to
the precision; otherwise, format f is used. Trailing zeros are
suppressed in the fractional portion of the result. A decimal point
appears only if it is followed by a digit.
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c
|
Byte
|
Converts an
int
argument to an
unsigned char
, and writes the resulting byte.
If the optional character l (lowercase ell) precedes this conversion
specifier, then the specifier converts a
wchar_t
argument to an array of bytes representing the character, and writes
the resulting character. If the field width is specified and the
resulting character occupies fewer bytes than the field width, it will
be padded to the given width with space characters. If the precision is
specified, the behavior is undefined.
|
|
Wide-character
|
If an l (lowercase ell) does not precede the c specifier, then the
int
argument is converted to a wide character as if by calling
btowc
, and the resulting character is written.
If an l (lowercase ell) precedes the c specifier, then the specifier
converts a
wchar_t
argument to an array of bytes representing the character, and writes
the resulting character. If the field width is specified and the
resulting character occupies fewer characters than the field width, it
will be padded to the given width with space characters. If the
precision is specified, the behavior is undefined.
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C
|
Byte
|
Converts a
wchar_t
argument to an array of bytes representing the character, and writes
the resulting character. If the field width is specified and the
resulting character occupies fewer bytes than the field width, it will
be padded to the given width with space characters. If the precision is
specified, the behavior is undefined.
|
|
Wide-character
|
Converts a
wchar_t
argument to an array of bytes representing the character, and writes
the resulting character. If the field width is specified and the
resulting character occupies fewer wide characters than the field
width, it will be padded to the given width with space characters. If
the precision is specified, the behavior is undefined.
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s
|
Byte
|
Requires an argument that is a pointer to an array of characters of type
char
. The argument is used to write characters until a null character is
encountered or until the number of characters indicated by the
precision specification is exhausted. If the precision specification is
0 or omitted, all characters up to a null are output.
If the optional character l (lowercase ell) precedes this
conversion specifier, then the specifier converts an array of
wide-character codes to multibyte characters, and writes the multibyte
characters. Requires an argument that is a pointer to an array of wide
characters of type
wchar_t
. Characters are written until a null wide character is encountered or
until the number of bytes indicated by the precision specification is
exhausted. If the precision specification is omitted or is greater than
the size of the array of converted bytes, the array of wide characters
must be terminated by a null wide character.
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|
Wide-character
|
If an l (lowercase ell) does not precede the s specifier, then the
specifier converts an array of multibyte characters, as if by calling
mbrtowc
for each multibyte character, and writes the resulting characters until
a null wide character is encountered or the number of wide characters
indicated by the precision specification is exhausted. If the precision
specification is omitted or is greater than the size of the array of
converted characters, the converted array must be terminated by a null
wide character.
If an l precedes this conversion specifier, then the argument is a
pointer to an array of
wchar_t
. Characters from this array are written until a null wide character is
encountered or the number of wide characters indicated by the precision
specification is exhausted. If the precision specification is omitted
or is greater than the size of the array, the array must be terminated
by a null wide character.
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S
|
Byte
|
Converts an array of wide-character codes to multibyte characters, and
writes the multibyte characters. Requires an argument that is a pointer
to an array of wide characters of type
wchar_t
. Characters are written until a null wide character is encountered or
until the number of bytes indicated by the precision specification is
exhausted. If the precision specification is omitted or is greater than
the size of the array of converted bytes, the array of wide characters
must be terminated by a null wide character.
|
|
Wide-character
|
The argument is a pointer to an array of
wchar_t
. Characters from this array are written until a null wide character is
encountered or the number of wide characters indicated by the precision
specification is exhausted. If the precision specification is omitted
or is greater than the size of the array, the array must be terminated
by a null wide character.
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p
|
|
Requires an argument that is a pointer to
void
. The value of the pointer is output as a hexadecimal number.
|
n
|
|
Requires an argument that is a pointer to an integer. The integer is
assigned the number of characters written to the output stream so far
by this call to the formatted output function. No argument is converted.
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%
|
|
Writes out the percent symbol. No conversion is performed. The complete
conversion specification would be %%.
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1Either Byte or Wide-character. Where
neither is shown for a given specifier, the specifier description
applies to both.
2.5 Terminal I/O
Compaq C defines three file pointers that allow you to perform I/O
to and from the logical devices usually associated with your terminal
(for interactive jobs) or a batch stream (for batch jobs). In the
OpenVMS environment, the three
permanent process files SYS$INPUT, SYS$OUTPUT, and SYS$ERROR perform
the same functions for both interactive and batch jobs. Terminal I/O
refers to both terminal and batch stream I/O. The file pointers stdin,
stdout, and stderr are defined when you include the
<stdio.h>
header file using the
#include
preprocessor directive.
The stdin file pointer is associated with the terminal to perform
input. This file is equivalent to SYS$INPUT. The stdout file pointer is
associated with the terminal to perform output. This file is equivalent
to SYS$OUTPUT. The stderr file pointer is associated with the terminal
to report run-time errors. This file is equivalent to SYS$ERROR.
There are three file descriptors that refer to the terminal. The file
descriptor 0 is equivalent to SYS$INPUT, 1 is equivalent to SYS$OUTPUT,
and 2 is equivalent to SYS$ERROR.
When performing I/O at the terminal, you can use Standard I/O functions
and macros (specifying the pointers stdin, stdout, or stderr as
arguments), you can use UNIX I/O functions (giving the corresponding
file descriptor as an argument), or you can use the Terminal I/O
functions and macros. There is no functional advantage to using one
type of I/O over another; the Terminal I/O functions might save
keystrokes since there are no arguments.
2.6 Program Examples
This section gives some program examples that show how the I/O
functions can be used in applications.
Example 2-1 shows the
printf
function.
Example 2-1 Output of the Conversion
Specifications |
/* CHAP_2_OUT_CONV.C */
/* This program uses the printf function to print the */
/* various conversion specifications and their affect */
/* on the output. */
/* Include the proper header files in case printf has */
/* to return EOF. */
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <wchar.h>
#define WIDE_STR_SIZE 20
main()
{
double val = 123345.5;
char c = 'C';
int i = -1500000000;
char *s = "thomasina";
wchar_t wc;
wchar_t ws[WIDE_STR_SIZE];
/* Produce a wide character and a wide character string */
if (mbtowc(&wc, "W", 1) == -1) {
perror("mbtowc");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
if (mbstowcs(ws, "THOMASINA", WIDE_STR_SIZE) == -1) {
perror("mbstowcs");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
/* Print the specification code, a colon, two tabs, and the */
/* formatted output value delimited by the angle bracket */
/* characters (<>). */
printf("%%9.4f:\t\t<%9.4f>\n", val);
printf("%%9f:\t\t<%9f>\n", val);
printf("%%9.0f:\t\t<%9.0f>\n", val);
printf("%%-9.0f:\t\t<%-9.0f>\n\n", val);
printf("%%11.6e:\t\t<%11.6e>\n", val);
printf("%%11e:\t\t<%11e>\n", val);
printf("%%11.0e:\t\t<%11.0e>\n", val);
printf("%%-11.0e:\t\t<%-11.0e>\n\n", val);
printf("%%11g:\t\t<%11g>\n", val);
printf("%%9g:\t\t<%9g>\n\n", val);
printf("%%d:\t\t<%d>\n", c);
printf("%%c:\t\t<%c>\n", c);
printf("%%o:\t\t<%o>\n", c);
printf("%%x:\t\t<%x>\n\n", c);
printf("%%d:\t\t<%d>\n", i);
printf("%%u:\t\t<%u>\n", i);
printf("%%x:\t\t<%x>\n\n", i);
printf("%%s:\t\t<%s>\n", s);
printf("%%-9.6s:\t\t<%-9.6s>\n", s);
printf("%%-*.*s:\t\t<%-*.*s>\n", 9, 5, s);
printf("%%6.0s:\t\t<%6.0s>\n\n", s);
printf("%%C:\t\t<%C>\n", wc);
printf("%%S:\t\t<%S>\n", ws);
printf("%%-9.6S:\t\t<%-9.6S>\n", ws);
printf("%%-*.*S:\t\t<%-*.*S>\n", 9, 5, ws);
printf("%%6.0S:\t\t<%6.0S>\n\n", ws);
}
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Running Example 2-1 produces the following output:
$ RUN EXAMPLE
%9.4f: <123345.5000>
%9f: <123345.500000>
%9.0f: < 123346>
%-9.0f: <123346 >
%11.6e: <1.233455e+05>
%11e: <1.233455e+05>
%11.0e: < 1e+05>
%-11.0e: <1e+05 >
%11g: < 123346>
%9g: < 123346>
%d: <67>
%c: <C>
%o: <103>
%x: <43>
%d: <-1500000000>
%u: <2794967296>
%x: <a697d100>
%s: <thomasina>
%-9.6s: <thomas >
%-*.*s: <thoma >
%6.0s: < >
%C: <W>
%S: <THOMASINA>
%-9.6S: <THOMAS >
%-*.*S: <THOMA >
%6.0S: < >
$
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Example 2-2 shows the use of the
fopen
,
ftell
,
sprintf
,
fputs
,
fseek
,
fgets
, and
fclose
functions.
Example 2-2 Using the Standard I/O
Functions |
/* CHAP_2_STDIO.C */
/* This program establishes a file pointer, writes lines from */
/* a buffer to the file, moves the file pointer to the second */
/* record, copies the record to the buffer, and then prints */
/* the buffer to the screen. */
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
main()
{
char buffer[32];
int i,
pos;
FILE *fptr;
/* Set file pointer. */
fptr = fopen("data.dat", "w+");
if (fptr == NULL) {
perror("fopen");
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
for (i = 1; i < 5; i++) {
if (i == 2) /* Get position of record 2. */
pos = ftell(fptr);
/* Print a line to the buffer. */
sprintf(buffer, "test data line %d\n", i);
/* Print buffer to the record. */
fputs(buffer, fptr);
}
/* Go to record number 2. */
if (fseek(fptr, pos, 0) < 0) {
perror("fseek"); /* Exit on fseek error. */
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
/* Read record 2 in the buffer. */
if (fgets(buffer, 32, fptr) == NULL) {
perror("fgets"); /* Exit on fgets error. */
exit(EXIT_FAILURE);
}
/* Print the buffer. */
printf("Data in record 2 is: %s", buffer);
fclose(fptr); /* Close the file. */
}
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