@WhozCraig well stated shortcomings to this advice. Its comes without rational nor detail. Further it does not apply to "%s"
as "%s"
consumes leading white-space with or without a leading space.
A leading white-space, be it ' '
, '\t'
, '\n'
, etc. all do the same thing: direct scanf()
to consume and not store optional leading white-space char
. This is useful as typical usage of previous scanf()
does not consume the user's '\n'
from the Enter
scanf("%d", &some_int);
scanf("%c", &some_char); // some_char is bound to get the value '\n'
All scanf()
input specifiers ignore leading spaces, except 3: "%c"
, "%n"
, "%[]"
.
Simple directives do benefit with the leading space as in the following. Previous left-over white-space is consumed before '$'
.
int Money;
scanf(" $%d", &Money);
Often, though not always, a leading space before "%c"
is beneficial as when reading a single char
of user input.
char ch;
scanf(" %c", &ch);
What is most wrong with the advice is that 1) when using "%s"
, supplying a width parameter is essential to robust code and 2) the return value should be checked.
char buf[30];
int cnt = scanf("%29s", buf);
if (cnt != 1) Handle_NoInput_or_EOF_IOError();
Note that all the conversion specifiers except %c
, %[…]
(scan sets) and %n
skip leading white space automatically, so the advice is not really relevant with %s
, or %d
or %lf
, etc.
Lastly, I recommend using fgets()
rather than scanf()
whenever one can — which is usually the case.
%c
fetching is likely the dominant reasoning behind that sledge-hammer statement, and failure to provide the specifics like that make me question the voodoo teaching ideology of that text. "Always do <blah>" without some sort of explanation why you should follow that mantra, and how things can go wrong if you don't, are often more confusing than helpful (case in point, your posting this question...). Anyway, you may find this answer helpful.scanf
superseded byscanf_s
in C11?scanf_s()
is an optional function defined in Annex K §3.5.3.4 Thescanf_s
function. Microsoft would rather you used their version ofscanf_s()
but few other compilers/libraries have implemented it. The signatures of these functions agree, something which is not guaranteed with the_s
(safer) functions."%s"
means: ignore optional leading whitespace and read a whitespace delimited string..." %s"
means ignore optional whitespace and then ignore optional leading whitespace and read a whitespace delimited string.