Is there a function around somewhere that I can use to predict the space that sprintf( ) will need? IOW, can I call a function size_t predict_space( "%s\n", some_string ) that will return the length of the C-string that will result from sprintf( "%s\n", some_string )?
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In C99
7.19.6.5 The snprintf function
Synopsis
[#1]
#include <stdio.h>
int snprintf(char * restrict s, size_t n,
const char * restrict format, ...);
Description
[#2] The snprintf function is equivalent to fprintf, except
that the output is written into an array (specified by
argument s) rather than to a stream. If n is zero, nothing
is written, and s may be a null pointer. Otherwise, output
characters beyond the n-1st are discarded rather than being
written to the array, and a null character is written at the
end of the characters actually written into the array. If
copying takes place between objects that overlap, the
behavior is undefined.
Returns
[#3] The snprintf function returns the number of characters
that would have been written had n been sufficiently large,
not counting the terminating null character, or a negative
value if an encoding error occurred. Thus, the null-
terminated output has been completely written if and only if
the returned value is nonnegative and less than n.
For example:
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Use can use snprintf() with a size of of 0 to find out exactly how many bytes will be required. The price is that the string is in effect formatted twice. | |||||||||||||||||
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You can use
But see Autoconf's portability notes on | |||
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In most cases, you can compute it by adding length of the string you are concatenating and taking max length for numeric values based on the format you used. | |||
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strlenonsome_stringand use that to calculate how much space is needed? – MAK Mar 17 '11 at 11:44snprintfis probably the way to go. In systems without that function, we've usedFILE *fh = fopen ("/dev/null", "w")and thenx = fprintf (fh, fmtstr, blah, blah, blah);to get the length. – paxdiablo Mar 17 '11 at 11:51