6

I am trying to populate a string with a double value using a sprintf like this:

sprintf(S, "%f", val);

But the precision is being cut off to six decimal places. I need about 10 decimal places for the precision.

How can that be achieved?

5 Answers 5

9

%[width].[precision]

Width should include the decimal point.

%8.2 means 8 characters wide; 5 digits before the point and 2 after. One character is reserved for the point.

5 + 1 + 2 = 8

7

What you want is a modifier:

sprintf(S, "%.10f", val);

man sprintf will have many more details on format specifiers.

3
  • Just a note: if he's using a double, would using "lf" be more correct?
    – Jeremy
    Sep 16, 2008 at 6:21
  • floats only carry about 6 digits of precision. use %lf for a double.
    – EvilTeach
    Nov 1, 2008 at 19:06
  • @EvilTeach: Wrong. %f is for doubles. There's no format specifier for floats. See this: stackoverflow.com/questions/25860850/…
    – Tara
    Apr 23, 2016 at 3:14
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For a more complete reference, see the Wikipedia printf article, section "printf format placeholders" and a good example on the same page.

1

Take care - the output of sprintf will vary via C locale. This may or may not be what you want. See LC_NUMERIC in the locale docs/man pages.

1

%f is for float values.

Try using %lf instead. It is designed for doubles (which used to be called long floats).

double x = 3.14159265;
printf("15.10lf\n", x);

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