8

As of now I'm using below line to print with out dot's

fprintf( stdout, "%-40s[%d]", tag, data);

I'm expecting the output would be something like following,

Number of cards..................................[500]
Fixed prize amount [in whole dollars]............[10]
Is this a high winner prize?.....................[yes]

How to print out dash or dot using fprintf/printf?

7 Answers 7

10

A faster approach:

If the maximum amount of padding that you'll ever need is known in advance (which is normally the case when you're formatting a fixed-width table like the one you have), you can use a static "padder" string and just grab a chunk out of it. This will be faster than calling printf or cout in a loop.

static const char padder[] = "......................"; // Many chars

size_t title_len = strlen(title);
size_t pad_amount = sizeof(padder) - 1 - title_len;

printf(title); // Output title

if (pad_amount > 0) {
    printf(padder + title_len); // Chop!
}

printf("[%d]", data);

You could even do it in one statement, with some leap of faith:

printf("%s%s[%d]", title, padder + strlen(title), data);
4
  • your last suggestion breaks if strlen(title) > strlen(padder)
    – Christoph
    Jan 16, 2009 at 19:28
  • @Christoph, hence the proclaimed "leap of faith" :)
    – Ates Goral
    Jan 16, 2009 at 19:48
  • @Ates: interesting concept, this 'faithful programming' of yours ;)
    – Christoph
    Jan 16, 2009 at 20:07
  • size_t -> int is required in if ((int)pad_amount > 0)
    – vitrums
    Jun 4, 2014 at 15:57
9

You can easily do this with iostreams instead of printf

cout << setw(40) << setfill('.') << left << tag[i] << '[' << data[i] << ']' << endl;

Or if you really need to use fprintf (say, you are passed a FILE* to write to)

strstream str;
str << setw(40) << setfill('.') << left << tag[i] << '[' << data[i] << ']' << endl;
printf(%s", str.str());
1
  • +1 for being easy to read and understand and not breaking under certain (albeit somewhat uncommon situations). Jan 16, 2009 at 21:27
3

You can't do it in one statement. You can use sprintf, then substitute dots for spaces yourself, or do something like

int chars_so_far;
char padder[40+1]= '..........'; //assume this is 40 dots.
printf("%.40s%n",tag,&chars_so_far);
printf("%s[%d]",padder+chars_so_far,data);

Edit: Simplified my example above based on @Ates' padder concept. This way doesn't require any 'leaps of faith', about whether the tag string is too big or too small - it always starts the data in column 41.

1
  • @Ates: it could, but imo not without two calls to strlen() if you want to properly check boundaries - therefore, you need to cache this value -> two statements!
    – Christoph
    Jan 16, 2009 at 19:24
2

You are going to have to output the string with the dot or dash padding yourself.

Something like (forgive my C, it's rusty):

printAmount(char *txt, int amt) {
    printf("%s",txt);
    for(int xa=strlen(txt); xa<40; xa++) { putc('.'); }
    printf("[%d]",amt);
    printf("\n");
    }
2

Another solution using a tiny helper function

static inline size_t min(size_t a, size_t b)
{
    return a < b ? a : b;
}

Then, you can do the following:

char padder[] = "........................................";
int len = min(strlen(tag), sizeof(padder) - 1);
printf("%.*s%s[%d]", len, tag, padder + len, data);

This is essentially what Ates posted, but I actually figured this out on my own ;)

2
  • Change the size_t to int; you must pass an int to the '*' in the printf() family of functions. Jan 16, 2009 at 20:57
  • Or make the helper more helpful: printf("%s%s[%d]", title, getPadding(title), data);
    – Ates Goral
    Jan 16, 2009 at 20:59
1

I'd suggest writing a function that pads a string with X characters and use that to generate the first argument to your printf string. Something like:

char s[40];
pad_str(tag, s, 40, '.');
fprintf( stdout, "%-40s[%d]", s, data);

Note that the third line of your sample data would need this format:

"%-40s[%s]"
1
  • This makes the most sense. If you are padding to a fixed amount of characters, you probably want to chop titles that are too long, so it makes sense to use fixed-width arrays.
    – sleblanc
    Nov 19, 2019 at 23:23
0

I think there's a better way.

#include <string.h>
#include <stdio.h>

#define MIN(A,B) ((A)<(B)?(A):(B))
char *dashpad(char *buf, int len, const char *instr) {
    memset(buf, '-', len);
    buf[len] = 0;
    int inlen = strlen(instr);
    memcpy(buf, instr, MIN(len, inlen));
    return buf;
}
main() {
    char buf[40];
    printf("%s\n", dashpad(buf, 40, "Hello world, dash padded "));
}
5
  • First filling the entire buffer with the pad character, and then overwriting them seems a bit wasteful though...
    – Ates Goral
    Jan 17, 2009 at 0:40
  • Also, you have a buffer overrun (don't you love C) - s/be: buf[len-1]=0; Jan 17, 2009 at 7:48
  • And you have a null-erasure bug in you min(), which should also be len-1. Jan 17, 2009 at 7:50
  • is it possible to call a function inside printf?
    – Thi
    Jan 17, 2009 at 19:47
  • @Thi: Yes this is legitimate - the function is invoked and it's return passed as a parameter to printf... this is normal coding in any procedural, OOP or functional language. Jan 18, 2009 at 22:08

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