The code in question is from grub. Normally in a printf implementation, you'd see stdarg
and va_start
, va_list
, va_end
and va_arg
, but they seem to be doing some casting here. My guess is that they're relying on some strange trick to grab the parameters and (int *)
is similar to va_arg(parameter, int)
. Is this portable code? How does it work?
/* Format a string and print it on the screen, just like the libc
function printf. */
void
printf(const char *format, ...) {
char **arg = (char **) &format;
int c;
char buf[20];
arg++;
while ((c = *format++) != 0) {
if (c != '%')
putchar(c);
else {
char *p;
c = *format++;
switch (c) {
case 'd':
case 'u':
case 'x':
itoa(buf, c, *((int *) arg++));
p = buf;
goto string;
break;
case 's':
p = *arg++;
if (!p)
strcpy(p, "(null)");
string:
while (*p)
putchar(*p++);
break;
default:
putchar(*((int *) arg++));
break;
}
}
}
}