How do you escape the % sign when using printf
in C?
printf("hello\%"); /* not like this */
You can escape it by posting a double '%' like this: %%
Using your example:
printf("hello%%");
Escaping the '%' sign is only for printf. If you do:
char a[5];
strcpy(a, "%%");
printf("This is a's value: %s\n", a);
It will print: This is a's value: %%
%
is specific to printf
, correct?
\045
is compile-time escape that is part of the language and will turn into %
when compiled. printf
is a run-time function, so it deals with bytes of your string, not with C source code, and it has its own escape sequences that are parts of the function. In short, printf
is a "language inside a language", and printf("This is a's value: %s\n", a);
gives the same result as printf("This is a's value: \045\0163\012", a);
.
printf("hello%c", '%');
. However, %%
is better because it doesn't use another argument.
As others have said, %% will escape the %.
Note, however, that you should never do this:
char c[100];
char *c2;
...
printf(c); /* OR */
printf(c2);
Whenever you have to print a string, always, always, always print it using
printf("%s", c)
to prevent an embedded % from causing problems (memory violations, segmentation faults, etc.).
fputs(string, stdout);
or printf("%s", string);
Nov 2, 2015 at 15:00
If there are no formats in the string, you can use puts
(or fputs
):
puts("hello%");
if there is a format in the string:
printf("%.2f%%", 53.2);
As noted in the comments, puts
appends a \n
to the output and fputs
does not.
puts
. I never thought of puts
for printing strings and jumped straight to printf
. Not anymore.
Nitpick:
You don't really escape the %
in the string that specifies the format for the printf()
(and scanf()
) family of functions.
The %
, in the printf()
(and scanf()
) family of functions, starts a conversion specification. One of the rules for conversion specification states that a %
as a conversion specifier (immediately following the %
that started the conversion specification) causes a '%'
character to be written with no argument converted.
The string really has 2 '%'
characters inside (as opposed to escaping characters: "a\bc"
is a string with 3 non null characters; "a%%b"
is a string with 4 non null characters).
Like this:
printf("hello%%");
//-----------^^ inside printf, use two percent signs together
You are using the incorrect format specifier. You should use %%
for printing %
. Your code should be:
printf("hello%%");
Read more all format specifiers used in C.
The backslash in C is used to escape characters in strings. Strings would not recognize %
as a special character, and therefore no escape would be necessary. printf
is another matter: use %%
to print one %
.
You can simply use %
twice, that is "%%"
Example:
printf("You gave me 12.3 %% of profit");
The double '%' works also in ".Format(…).
Example (with iDrawApertureMask == 87, fCornerRadMask == 0.05):
csCurrentLine.Format("\%ADD%2d%C,%6.4f*\%",iDrawApertureMask,fCornerRadMask) ;
gives the desired and expected value of (string contents in) csCurrentLine;
"%ADD87C, 0.0500*%"
"hello\%"
doesn't work because it produces the stringhello%
plus NUL just like"hello%"
does."hello\%"
doesn't work because... for me... it does not compile. I used Microsoft Visual Studio 2017. The compilation fails with the message:'%': unrecognized character escape sequence.
\%
.