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In c++, setw function is used to set the number of characters to be used as the field width for the next insertion operation. Is there any function in C, I mean, in standard c library, which does the same thing?

2
  • 1
    This may be the first time I've seen someone who understands how to use iostream formatters and not how to do the equivalent thing with printf... it's nearly always the other way around. :) Jul 6, 2010 at 17:01
  • 1
    Yeah, I run into the same things all the time. I learned the c++ style iostream formatters in college, but we use c-style at work.
    – Joe Lyga
    Apr 25, 2013 at 17:03

4 Answers 4

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printf ("%5d", 42);

Will print 42 using 5 spaces. Read the man pages of printf to understand how character padding, overflow and other nuances work.

EDIT: Some examples -

int x = 4000;
printf ("1234567890\n");
printf ("%05d\n", x);
printf ("%d\n", x);
printf ("%5d\n", x);
printf ("%2d\n", x);

Gives the output

1234567890
04000
4000
 4000
4000

Notice that the %2d was too small to handle the number passed to it, yet still printed the entire value.

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    Note that placing a - in front of the padding number will cause the output to align to the left. For example, printf("%-7s, "12345"); will print 12345__ where the _ is a space. This is opposed to printf("%7s, "12345"); which will give you __12345. Related Answer
    – mibacode
    Mar 7, 2015 at 19:11
5

No, since the stream used in C doesn't maintain state the way the stream object does.

You need to specify with e.g. printf() using a suitable formatting code.

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  • could you specify how could I do that? I need the equivalent formatting of 'setw(2)'...... Jul 6, 2010 at 14:35
3

Another option is to define the format string as a variable:

char print_format[] = "%5d"; printf(print_format, 42);

The above is similar to C++ setw, in that you can set the contents of the variable before printing. Many occasions require dynamic formatting of the output. This is one method to achieve it.

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setw Manipulator: This manipulator sets the minimum field width on output. The syntax is: setw(x) Here setw causes the number or string that follows it to be printed within a field of x characters wide and x is the argument set in setw manipulator. The header file that must be included while using setw manipulator is Sample Code

 #include <iostream>
 using namespace std;
 #include <iomanip> 
  
 void main( )
 {
 int x1=12345,x2= 23456, x3=7892;
 cout << setw(8) << "Exforsys" << setw(20) << "Values" << endl
         << setw(8) << "E1234567" << setw(20)<< x1 << endl
         << setw(8) << "S1234567" << setw(20)<< x2 << endl
         << setw(8) << "A1234567" << setw(20)<< x3 << endl;
 } 
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    this is not the c equivilent
    – Joe Lyga
    Apr 25, 2013 at 17:04
  • 1
    This is not a valid answer. Not c equivalent. Oct 21, 2017 at 7:08

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