2

Consider the code, in the C programming language:

double d = 3.4;
printf("%02.2f", d);

or

double d = 3.4;
printf("%2.2f", d);

The output you get when running these blocks of code are:

3.40

I am trying to format a table and need to reserve spaces in front of a double or float so that my tables doesn't draw askew.

What is the best way to obtain the output

03.40

as intended?

1
  • sprintf to a string, get the length, and pass that to the table drawer
    – amdixon
    Apr 18, 2015 at 6:41

2 Answers 2

8
double d = 3.4;
printf("%05.2f", d);

The width field is for the entire converted string (not just the whole number part).

0
0

03.40 does not seem to be a good solution. You should add either leading or trailing spaces, not zeroes.

The best option would be to use snprintf:

const size_t buffer_size = 16;

double value = 3.40;
char buffer[buffer_size];
int result = snprintf(buffer, buffer_size, "%.2f", value);

if(result > 0 && result < buffer_size)
    printf("Length of string: %d (%s)\n", result, buffer);

Output:

Length of string: 4 (3.40)

Try this code here: link.

Oh, one more thing: snprintf is a C++ 11 feature. If you doesn't have access to a C++11-compliant compiler, either use less safer version, sprintf, or use platform-specific solution like sprintf_s in case of Visual C++.

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