2

The C99 standard says the implementation limit for characters of a string literal is 4095(?). But where exactly does a literal end and begin?

printf(
    "First part"
    "second part!\r\n"
    );

Would this be a single string literal? Or are this 2 string literals?

1 Answer 1

4

N1256 5.2.4.1 says:

  • 4095 characters in a character string literal or wide string literal (after concatenation)

The "after concatenation" refers to the concatenation of adjacent string literals that occurs in translation phase 6 (5.1.1.2).

So for purposes of the 4095-character limit, this:

"First part"
"second part!\r\n"

is a single string literal.

Note that that's a minimum upper bound. Implementations must permit string literals of any length up to 4095 characters; they may permit longer ones, and needn't impose any fixed limit at all.

It's actually more complicated than that; the standard requires an implementation to accept one translation unit that hits each of the limits. But in practice, you can rely on any conforming C99 compiler to permit 4095-character literals, unless your program runs into some other implementation limit.

The limit is the same in C11. In C90, it was 509 characters.

Incidentally, there's unlikely to be any good reason to print "\r\n" in a printf call. stdout is a text stream, which means that the '\n' newline character will be translated to whatever the OS uses as an end-of-line indicator.

(N1256 is a post-C99 draft, consisting of the official C99 standard with the three Technical Corrigenda incorporated into it. N1570 is the last pre-C11 draft, and is nearly identical to the released C11 standard. The official standards are not freely available.)

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.