printf Type Field Characters
The new home for Visual Studio documentation is Visual Studio 2017 Documentation on docs.microsoft.com.
The latest version of this topic can be found at Visual Studio 2017 Documentation. In a format specification, the type
character is a conversion specifier that specifies whether the corresponding argument is to be interpreted as a character, a string, a pointer, an integer, or a floating-point number. The type
character is the only required format specification field, and it appears after any optional fields.
The arguments that follow the format string are interpreted according to the corresponding type
character and the optional size prefix. Conversions for character types char
and wchar_t
are specified by using c
or C
, and single-byte and multi-byte or wide character strings are specified by using s
or S
, depending on which formatting function is being used. Character and string arguments that are specified by using c
and s
are interpreted as char
and char*
by printf
family functions, or as wchar_t
and wchar_t*
by wprintf
family functions. Character and string arguments that are specified by using C
and S
are interpreted as wchar_t
and wchar_t*
by printf
family functions, or as char
and char*
by wprintf
family functions.
Integer types such as short
, int
, long
, long long
, and their unsigned
variants, are specified by using d
, i
, o
, u
, x
, and X
. Floating-point types such as float
, double
, and long double
, are specified by using a
, A
, e
, E
, f
, g
, and G
. By default, unless they are modified by a size
field length prefix, integer arguments are coerced to int
type, and floating-point arguments are coerced to double
. On 64-bit systems, an int
is a 32-bit value; therefore, 64-bit integers will be truncated when they are formatted for output unless a size
prefix of ll
or I64
is used. Pointer types that are specified by p
use the default length for the platform.
Note
The C
, S
, and Z
type characters, and the behavior of the c
and s
type characters when they are used with the printf
and wprintf
functions, are Microsoft extensions and are not ANSI compatible. Visual C++ does not support the F
type character.
printf Type Field Characters
Type Character | Argument | Output format |
---|---|---|
c |
Character | When used with printf functions, specifies a single-byte character; when used with wprintf functions, specifies a wide character. |
C |
Character | When used with printf functions, specifies a wide character; when used with wprintf functions, specifies a single-byte character. |
d |
Integer | Signed decimal integer. |
i |
Integer | Signed decimal integer. |
o |
Integer | Unsigned octal integer. |
u |
Integer | Unsigned decimal integer. |
x |
Integer | Unsigned hexadecimal integer; uses "abcdef." |
X |
Integer | Unsigned hexadecimal integer; uses "ABCDEF." |
e |
Floating-point | Signed value that has the form [ – ]d .dddd e [sign]dd[d] where d is one decimal digit, dddd is one or more decimal digits, dd[d] is two or three decimal digits depending on the output format and size of the exponent, and sign is + or –. |
E |
Floating-point | Identical to the e format except that E rather than e introduces the exponent. |
f |
Floating-point | Signed value that has the form [ – ]dddd .dddd , where dddd is one or more decimal digits. The number of digits before the decimal point depends on the magnitude of the number, and the number of digits after the decimal point depends on the requested precision. |
g |
Floating-point | Signed values are displayed in f or e format, whichever is more compact for the given value and precision. The e format is used only when the exponent of the value is less than –4 or greater than or equal to the precision argument. Trailing zeros are truncated, and the decimal point appears only if one or more digits follow it. |
G |
Floating-point | Identical to the g format, except that E, rather than e, introduces the exponent (where appropriate). |
a |
Floating-point | Signed hexadecimal double-precision floating-point value that has the form [−]0xh.hhhh p±dd , where h.hhhh are the hex digits (using lower case letters) of the mantissa, and dd are one or more digits for the exponent. The precision specifies the number of digits after the point. |
A |
Floating-point | Signed hexadecimal double-precision floating-point value that has the form [−]0Xh.hhhh P±dd , where h.hhhh are the hex digits (using capital letters) of the mantissa, and dd are one or more digits for the exponent. The precision specifies the number of digits after the point. |
n |
Pointer to integer | Number of characters that are successfully written so far to the stream or buffer. This value is stored in the integer whose address is given as the argument. See the Security Note later in this article. |
p |
Pointer type | Displays the argument as an address in hexadecimal digits. |
s |
String | When used with printf functions, specifies a single-byte or multi-byte character string; when used with wprintf functions, specifies a wide-character string. Characters are displayed up to the first null character or until the precision value is reached. |
S |
String | When used with printf functions, specifies a wide-character string; when used with wprintf functions, specifies a single-byte or multi-byte character string. Characters are displayed up to the first null character or until the precision value is reached. |
Z |
ANSI_STRING or UNICODE_STRING structure |
When the address of an ANSI_STRING or UNICODE_STRING structure is passed as the argument, displays the string that's contained in the buffer that's pointed to by the Buffer field of the structure. Use a length modifier prefix of w to specify a UNICODE_STRING argument—for example, %wZ . The Length field of the structure must be set to the length, in bytes, of the string. The MaximumLength field of the structure must be set to the length, in bytes, of the buffer.Typically, the Z type character is used only in driver debugging functions that use a format specification, such as dbgPrint and kdPrint . |
If the argument that corresponds to a floating-point conversion specifier is infinite, indefinite, or NAN, the following table lists the formatted output.
Value | Output |
---|---|
+ infinity | 1.#INF random-digits |
– infinity | –1.#INF random-digits |
Indefinite (same as quiet NaN) | digit .#IND random-digits |
NAN | digit .#NAN random-digits |
Note
If the the Buffer
field of the argument that corresponds to %Z
, or of the argument that corresponds to %s
or %S
, is a null pointer, "(null)" will be displayed.
Note
In all exponential formats, the default number of digits of exponent to display is three. By using the _set_output_format function, you can set the number of digits displayed to two but expanding to three if demanded by the size of exponent.
Important
Because the %n
format is inherently insecure, it is disabled by default. If %n
is encountered in a format string, the invalid parameter handler is invoked, as described in Parameter Validation. To enable %n
support, see _set_printf_count_output.
See Also
printf, _printf_l, wprintf, _wprintf_l
Format Specification Syntax: printf and wprintf Functions
Flag Directives
printf Width Specification
Precision Specification
Size Specification
_set_output_format