A RetroSearch Logo

Home - News ( United States | United Kingdom | Italy | Germany ) - Football scores

Search Query:

Showing content from https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/language/../algorithm/../ranges/../io/c/fwprintf.html below:

std::wprintf, std::fwprintf, std::swprintf - cppreference.com

int wprintf( const wchar_t* format, ... );

(1) int fwprintf( std::FILE* stream, const wchar_t* format, ... ); (2) int swprintf( wchar_t* buffer, std::size_t size, const wchar_t* format, ... ); (3)

Loads the data from the given locations, converts them to wide string equivalents and writes the results to a variety of sinks.

1)

Writes the results to

stdout

.

2) Writes the results to a file stream stream.

3) Writes the results to a wide string buffer. At most size - 1 wide characters are written followed by null wide character.

[edit] Parameters stream - output file stream to write to buffer - pointer to a wide character string to write to size - up to size - 1 characters may be written, plus the null terminator format - pointer to a null-terminated wide string specifying how to interpret the data ... - arguments specifying data to print. If any argument after default conversions is not the type expected by the corresponding conversion specifier, or if there are fewer arguments than required by format, the behavior is undefined. If there are more arguments than required by format, the extraneous arguments are evaluated and ignored

The format string consists of ordinary wide characters (except %), which are copied unchanged into the output stream, and conversion specifications. Each conversion specification has the following format:

  • -: the result of the conversion is left-justified within the field (by default it is right-justified).
  • +: the sign of signed conversions is always prepended to the result of the conversion (by default the result is preceded by minus only when it is negative).
  • space: if the result of a signed conversion does not start with a sign character, or is empty, space is prepended to the result. It is ignored if + flag is present.
  • #: alternative form of the conversion is performed. See the table below for exact effects otherwise the behavior is undefined.
  • 0: for integer and floating-point number conversions, leading zeros are used to pad the field instead of space characters. For integer numbers it is ignored if the precision is explicitly specified. For other conversions using this flag results in undefined behavior. It is ignored if - flag is present.

The following format specifiers are available:

Conversion
Specifier Explanation Expected
Argument Type Length Modifier→ hh h none l ll j z t L Only available since C++11→ Yes Yes Yes Yes Yes % Writes literal %. The full conversion specification must be %%. N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A c

Writes a single character.

N/A N/A

int

std::wint_t

N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A s

Writes a character string.

N/A N/A

char*

wchar_t*

N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A d
i

Converts a signed integer into decimal representation [-]dddd.

signed char

short

int

long

long long

std::intmax_t

※

std::ptrdiff_t N/A o

Converts an unsigned integer into octal representation oooo.

unsigned char

unsigned short

unsigned int

unsigned long

unsigned long long

std::uintmax_t std::size_t

unsigned version of

std::ptrdiff_t N/A x
X

Converts an unsigned integer into hexadecimal representation hhhh.

N/A u

Converts an unsigned integer into decimal representation dddd.

N/A f
F (C++11)

Converts floating-point number to the decimal notation in the style [-]ddd.ddd.

N/A N/A

double

double (C++11)

N/A N/A N/A N/A

long double

e
E

Converts floating-point number to the decimal exponent notation.

N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A a
A

(C++11)

Converts floating-point number to the hexadecimal exponent notation.

N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A g
G

Converts floating-point number to decimal or decimal exponent notation depending on the value and the precision.

N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A n

Returns the number of characters written so far by this call to the function.

signed char*

short*

int*

long*

long long*

std::intmax_t*

※

 std::ptrdiff_t*  N/A p

Writes an implementation defined character sequence defining a pointer.

N/A N/A

void*

N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A N/A Notes

The floating-point conversion functions convert infinity to inf or infinity. Which one is used is implementation defined.

Not-a-number is converted to nan or nan(char_sequence). Which one is used is implementation defined.

The conversions F, E, G, A output INF, INFINITY, NAN instead.

The conversion specifier used to print char, unsigned char, signed char, short, and unsigned short expects promoted types of default argument promotions, but before printing its value will be converted to char, unsigned char, signed char, short, and unsigned short. It is safe to pass values of these types because of the promotion that takes place when a variadic function is called.

The correct conversion specifications for the fixed-width character types (std::int8_t, etc) are defined in the header <cinttypes> (although PRIdMAX, PRIuMAX, etc is synonymous with %jd, %ju, etc).

The memory-writing conversion specifier %n is a common target of security exploits where format strings depend on user input.

There is a sequence point after the action of each conversion specifier; this permits storing multiple %n results in the same variable or, as an edge case, printing a string modified by an earlier %n within the same call.

If a conversion specification is invalid, the behavior is undefined.

[edit] Return value

1,2) Number of wide characters written if successful or negative value if an error occurred.

3) Number of wide characters written (not counting the terminating null wide character) if successful or negative value if an encoding error occurred or if the number of characters to be generated was equal or greater than size (including when size is zero).

[edit] Notes

While narrow strings provide std::snprintf, which makes it possible to determine the required output buffer size, there is no equivalent for wide strings, and in order to determine the buffer size, the program may need to call std::swprintf, check the result value, and reallocate a larger buffer, trying again until successful.

[edit] Example
#include <clocale>
#include <cwchar>
#include <iostream>
#include <locale>
 
int main()
{
    char narrow_str[] = "z\u00df\u6c34\U0001f34c";
                  // or "zß水🍌";
                  // or "\x7a\xc3\x9f\xe6\xb0\xb4\xf0\x9f\x8d\x8c";
    wchar_t warr[29]; // the expected string is 28 characters plus 1 null terminator
    std::setlocale(LC_ALL, "en_US.utf8");
 
    std::swprintf(warr, sizeof warr/sizeof *warr,
                  L"Converted from UTF-8: '%s'", narrow_str);
 
    std::wcout.imbue(std::locale("en_US.utf8"));
    std::wcout << warr << '\n';
}

Output:

Converted from UTF-8: 'zß水🍌'
[edit] See also

RetroSearch is an open source project built by @garambo | Open a GitHub Issue

Search and Browse the WWW like it's 1997 | Search results from DuckDuckGo

HTML: 3.2 | Encoding: UTF-8 | Version: 0.7.4